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Fundamental Concepts

Objectives
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
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Explain the nature and importance of wireless communication. Outline the history of wireless communication. Explain the necessity for modulation in a radio communication system. Outline the roles of the transmitter, receiver, and channel in a radio communication system. Describe and explain the differences among simplex, half-duplex, and full-duplex communication systems. Describe the need for wireless networks and explain the use of repeaters. List and briefly describe the major types of modulation. State the relationship between bandwidth and information rate for any communication system. Calculate thermal noise power in a given bandwidth at a given temperature. Explain the concept of signal-to-noise ratio and its importance to communication systems. Describe the radio-frequency spectrum and convert between frequency and wavelength.

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CHAPTER 1

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1.1

Introduction
This is a book on wireless communication. That usually means communication by radio, though ultrasound and infrared light are also used occasionally. The term wireless has come to mean nonbroadcast communication, usually between individuals who very often use portable or mobile equipment. The term is rather vague, of course, and there are certainly borderline applications that are called wireless without falling exactly into the above definition. Wireless communication is the fastest-growing part of the very dynamic field of electronic communication. It is an area with many jobs that go unfilled due to a shortage of knowledgeable people. It is the authors hope that this book will help to remedy that situation.

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1.2

Brief History of Wireless Telecommunication


Most of this book is concerned with the present state of wireless communication, with some speculation as to the future. However, in order to understand the present state of the art, a brief glimpse of the past will be useful. Present-day systems have evolved from their predecessors, some of which are still very much with us. Similarly, we can expect that future systems will be developed from current ones.

The Beginning

Wireless telecommunication began only a little later than the wired variety. Morses telegraph (1837) and Bells telephone (1876) were soon followed by Hertzs first experiments with radio (1887). Hertzs system was a laboratory curiosity, but Marconi communicated across the English Channel in 1899 and across the Atlantic Ocean in 1901. These successes led to the widespread use of radio for ship-to-ship and ship-to-shore communication using Morse code. Early wireless systems used crude, though often quite powerful, sparkgap transmitters, and were suitable only for radiotelegraphy. The invention of the triode vacuum tube by De Forest in 1906 allowed for the modulation of a continuous-wave signal and made voice transmission practical. There is some dispute about exactly who did what first, but it appears likely that Reginald Fessenden made the first public broadcast of voice and music in late 1906. Commercial radio broadcasting in both the United States and Canada began in 1920. Early radio transmitters were too cumbersome to be installed in vehicles. In fact, the first mobile radio systems, for police departments, were one-way,

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

with only a receiver in the police car. The first such system to be considered practical was installed in Detroit in 1928. Two-way police radio, with the equipment occupying most of the car trunk, began in the mid-1930s. Amplitude modulation (AM) was used until the late 1930s, when frequency modulation (FM) began to displace it. World War II provided a major incentive for the development of mobile and portable radio systems, including two-way systems known as walkietalkies that could be carried in the field and might be considered the distant ancestors of todays cell phones. FM proved its advantages over AM in the war.

Postwar Expansion

Soon after the end of World War II, two systems were developed that presaged modern wireless communication. AT&T introduced its Improved Mobile Telephone Service (IMTS) in 1946, featuring automatic connection of mobile subscribers to the public switched telephone network (PSTN) . This was an expensive service with limited capacity, but it did allow true mobile telephone service. This system is still in use in some remote areas, where, for instance, it allows access to the PSTN from summer cottages. The next year, in 1947, the American government set up the Citizens Band (CB) radio service. Initially it used frequencies near 460 MHz, but in that respect it was ahead of its time, since equipment for the UHF range was prohibitively expensive. Frequencies in the 27-MHz band were allocated in 1958, and CB radio immediately became very popular. The service was shortrange, had no connection to the PSTN, and offered users no privacy, but it was (and still is) cheap and easy to set up. The popularity of CB radio has declined in recent years but it is still useful in applications where its short range and lack of connectivity to the rest of the world are not disadvantages. For example, it serves very well to disseminate information about traffic problems on the highway. Meanwhile another rather humble-appearing appliance has become ubiquitous: the cordless phone. Usually intended for very short-range communication within a dwelling and its grounds, the system certainly lacks range and drama, but it does have connectivity with the PSTN. Most cordless phones use analog FM in the 46- and 49-MHz bands, but some of the latest models are digital and operate at either 900 MHz or 2.4 GHz. Cordless phones are cheap and simple to use, but their range is limited and, except for the digital models, they offer little privacy. Pagers were introduced in 1962. The first models merely signaled the user to find a telephone and call a prearranged number. More recent models can deliver an alphanumeric message and even carry a reply. Though relatively limited in function, pagers remain very popular due to their low cost and small size.

CHAPTER 1

The Cellular Revolution

The worlds first cellular radio service was installed in Japan in 1979, followed in 1983 by North American services. Cellular systems are quite different from previous radiotelephone services such as IMTS in that, instead of using a single powerful transmitter located on a tall tower for wide coverage, the power of each transmitter is deliberately kept relatively small so that the coverage area, called a cell, will also be small. Many small cells are used so that frequencies can be reused at short distances. Of course, a portable or mobile telephone may move from one cell to another cell during the course of a conversation. In fact, this handoff may occur several times during a conversation. Practical cellular systems had to await the development of computers fast enough and cheap enough to keep track of all this activity. Theoretically at least, the number of users in a cellular system can be increased indefinitely, simply by making the cells smaller. The first cellular systems used analog FM transmission, but digital modulation schemes, which provide greater privacy and can use bandwidth more efficiently, are used in all the new systems. These personal communication systems (PCS) usually operate in a higher frequency range (about 1.9 GHz compared with 800 MHz for North American cellular service). Current cellular systems are optimized for voice but can also transmit data. In the near future, high-speed data transmission using PCS is expected to become a reality. At this point, however, the past merges into the future, and well resume the discussion later in this book.

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1.3

Elements of a Wireless Communication System


The most basic possible wireless system consists of a transmitter, a receiver, and a channel, usually a radio link, as shown in Figure 1.1. Since radio cannot be used directly with low frequencies such as those in a human voice, it is necessary to superimpose the information content onto a higher frequency carrier signal at the transmitter, using a process called modulation. The use of modulation also allows more than one information signal to use

FIGURE 1.1

Elements of a communication system

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

the radio channel by simply using a different carrier frequency for each. The inverse process, demodulation, is performed at the receiver in order to recover the original information. The information signal is also sometimes called the intelligence , the modulating signal , or the baseband signal. An ideal communication system would reproduce the information signal exactly at the receiver, except for the inevitable time delay as it travels between transmitter and receiver, and except, possibly, for a change in amplitude. Any other changes constitute distortion. Any real system will have some distortion, of course: part of the design process is to decide how much distortion, and of what types, is acceptable.

Simplex and Duplex Communication

Figure 1.1 represents a simplex communication system. The communication is one way only, from transmitter to receiver. Broadcasting systems are like this, except that there are many receivers for each transmitter. Most of the systems we discuss in this book involve two-way communication. Sometimes communication can take place in both directions at once. This is called full-duplex communication. An ordinary telephone call is an example of full-duplex communication. It is quite possible (though perhaps not desirable) for both parties to talk at once, with each hearing the other. Figure 1.2 shows full-duplex communication. Note that it simply doubles the previous figure: we need two transmitters, two receivers, and, usually, two channels.

FIGURE 1.2

Full-duplex communication system

CHAPTER 1

Some two-way communication systems do not require simultaneous communication in both directions. An example of this half-duplex type of communication is a conversation over citizens band (CB) radio. The operator pushes a button to talk and releases it to listen. It is not possible to talk and listen at the same time, as the receiver is disabled while the transmitter is activated. Half-duplex systems save bandwidth by allowing the same channel to be used for communication in both directions. They can sometimes save money as well by allowing some circuit components in the transceiver to be used for both transmitting and receiving. They do sacrifice some of the naturalness of full-duplex communication, however. Figure 1.3 shows a half-duplex communication system.

FIGURE 1.3

Half-duplex communication system

Wireless Networks

The full- and half-duplex communication systems shown so far involve communication between only two users. Again, CB radio is a good example of this. When there are more than two simultaneous users, or when the two users are too far from each other for direct communication, some kind of network is required. Networks can take many forms, and several will be examined in this book. Probably the most common basic structure in wireless communication is the classic star network, shown in Figure 1.4. The central hub in a radio network is likely to be a repeater, which consists of a transmitter and receiver, with their associated antennas, located in

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

FIGURE 1.4 Star network

a good position from which to relay transmissions from and to mobile radio equipment. The repeater may also be connected to wired telephone or data networks. The cellular and PCS telephone systems that we look at later in the book have an elaborate network of repeater stations.

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1.4

Signals and Noise


The communication systems described in this book differ in many ways, but they all have two things in common. In every case we have a signal, which is used to carry useful information; and in every case there is noise, which enters the system from a variety of sources and degrades the signal, reducing the quality of the communication. Keeping the ratio between signal and noise sufficiently high is the basis for a great deal of the work that goes into the design of a communication system. This signal-to-noise ratio, abbreviated S/N and almost always expressed in decibels, is an important specification of virtually all communication systems. Let us first consider signal and noise separately, and then take a preliminary look at S/N.

Modulated Signals

Given the necessity for modulating a higher-frequency signal with a lower-frequency baseband signal, it is useful to look at the equation for a sine-wave carrier and consider what aspects of the signal can be varied. A general equation for a sine wave is: e ( t ) = E c sin( c t + ) (1.1)

CHAPTER 1

where e ( t ) = instantaneous voltage as a function of time E c = peak voltage of the carrier wave c = carrier frequency in radians per second t = time in seconds = phase angle in radians It is common to use radians and radians per second, rather than degrees and hertz, in the equations dealing with modulation, because it makes the mathematics simpler. Of course, practical equipment uses hertz for frequency indications. The conversion is easy. Just remember from basic ac theory that = 2 where = frequency in radians per second = frequency in hertz A look at Equation (1.1) shows us that there are only three parameters of a sine wave that can be varied: the amplitude E c , the frequency , and the phase angle . It is also possible to change more than one of these parameters simultaneously; for example, in digital communication it is common to vary both the amplitude and the phase of the signal. Once we decide to vary, or modulate, a sine wave, it becomes a complex waveform. This means that the signal will exist at more than one frequency; that is, it will occupy bandwidth . Bandwidth is a concept that will be explored in more detail later in this chapter and will recur often in this book. (1.2)

Noise

It is not sufficient to transmit a signal from transmitter to receiver if the noise that accompanies it is strong enough to prevent it from being understood. All electronic systems are affected by noise, which has many sources. In most of the systems discussed in this book, the most important noise component is thermal noise, which is created by the random motion of molecules that occurs in all materials at any temperature above absolute zero (0 K or 273 C). We shall have a good deal to say about noise and the ratio between signal and noise power ( S/N ) in later chapters. For now let us just note that thermal noise power is proportional to the bandwidth over which a system operates. The equation is very simple: P N = kTB (1.3)

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

where P N = noise power in watts k = Boltzmanns constant, 1.38 10 23 joules/kelvin (J/K) T = temperature in kelvins B = noise power bandwidth in hertz Note the recurrence of the term bandwidth. Here it refers to the range of frequencies over which the noise is observed. If we had a system with infinite bandwidth, theoretically the noise power would be infinite. Of course, real systems never have infinite bandwidth. A couple of other notes are in order. First, kelvins are equal to degrees Celsius in size; only the zero point on the scale is different. Therefore, converting between degrees Celsius and kelvins is easy: T ( K ) = T ( C ) + 273 where T ( K ) = absolute temperature in kelvins T ( C ) = temperature in degrees Celsius Also, the official terminology is degrees Celsius or C but just kelvins or K. (1.4)

EXAMPLE 1.1

Y
A resistor at a temperature of 25 C is connected across the input of an amplifier with a bandwidth of 50 kHz. How much noise does the resistor supply to the input of the amplifier?

SOLUTION
First we have to convert the temperature to kelvins. From Equation (1.4), T(K) = T(C) + 273 = 25 + 273 = 298 K Now substitute into Equation (1.3), PN = = = = kTB 1.38 1023 298 50 103 2.06 1016 W 0.206 fW

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CHAPTER 1

This is not a lot of power to be sure, but received signal levels in radio communication systems are also very small.

X
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
Maintaining an adequate ratio of signal power to noise power is essential for any communication system, though the exact definition of adequate varies greatly. Obviously there are two basic ways to improve S/N: increase the signal power or reduce the noise power. Increasing signal power beyond a certain point can cause problems, particularly where portable, batterypowered devices are concerned. Reducing noise power requires limiting bandwidth and, if possible, reducing the noise temperature of a system. The system bandwidth must be large enough to accommodate the signal bandwidth, but should be no larger than that. Some modulation schemes are more efficient than others at transmitting information with a given power and bandwidth.

Noise Figure and Noise Temperature

The noise temperature of a complex system is not necessarily equal to the actual operating temperature, but may be higher or lower. The noise temperature for electronic systems is often found by way of the noise figure, so let us look briefly at that specification. Noise figure describes the way in which a device adds noise to a signal and thereby degrades the signal-to-noise ratio. It is defined as follows: NF = where ( S/N ) i = signal-to-noise ratio at the input ( S/N ) o = signal-to-noise ratio at the output All of the above are expressed as power ratios, not in decibels. When a device has multiple stages, each stage contributes noise, but the first stage is the most important because noise inserted there is amplified by all other stages. The equation that expresses this is: NFT = NF1 + where NF T = total noise figure for the system NF 1 = noise figure of the first stage NF2 1 NF3 1 + + A1 A1A2 (1.6) ( S/N )i ( S/N )o (1.5)

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

11

NF 2 = noise figure of the second stage A 1 = gain of the first stage A 2 = gain of the second stage Again, all these are ratios, not in decibels. The noise figure for the system is usually specified in dB in the usual way: NF (dB) = 10 log NF Converting noise figure to noise temperature is quite easy: T eq = 290( NF 1) where T eq = equivalent noise temperature in kelvins NF = noise figure as a ratio (not in dB) The noise temperature due to the equipment must be added to the noise temperature contributed by the antenna and its transmission line to find the total system noise temperature. Well see how that is done after we have looked at receivers, antennas, and transmission lines separately. (1.8) (1.7)

EXAMPLE 1.2

Y
A three-stage amplifier has stages with the following specifications. Gain and noise figure are given as ratios.
Stage 1 2 3 Power Gain 10 25 30 Noise Figure 2 4 5

Calculate the power gain in decibels, noise figure in decibels, and equivalent noise temperature for the whole amplifier.

SOLUTION
The power gain is the product of the individual gains: AT = A1A2A3 = 10 25 30 = 7500 = 38.8 dB

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CHAPTER 1

The noise figure is found from NFT = NF1 + NF2 1 NF3 1 + + A1 A1A2 4 1 51 = 2+ + 10 10 25 = 2.316 = 3.65 dB The equivalent noise temperature is: Teq = 290(NF 1) = 290(2.316 1) = 382 K

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1.5

The Frequency Domain


The reader is probably familiar with the time-domain representation of signals. An ordinary oscilloscope display, showing amplitude on one scale and time on the other, is a good example. Signals can also be described in the frequency domain. In a frequencydomain representation, amplitude or power is shown on one axis and frequency is displayed on the other. A spectrum analyzer gives a frequencydomain representation of signals. Any signal can be represented either way. For example, a 1-kHz sine wave is shown in both ways in Figure 1.5. The time-domain representation should need no explanation. As for the frequency domain, a sine wave has energy only at its fundamental frequency, so it can be shown as a straight line at that frequency. Notice that our way of representing the signal in the frequency domain does not show the phase of the signal. The signal in Figure 1.5(b) could be a cosine wave just as easily as a sine wave. One example of a frequency-domain representation with which the reader will already be familiar is the tuning dial of an ordinary broadcast radio receiver. Each station is assigned a different carrier frequency. Provided that these frequencies are far enough apart, the signals will not interfere with each other. Dividing up the spectrum in this way is known as frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) , and can only be understood by referring to the frequency domain.

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

13

FIGURE 1.5

Sine wave in time and frequency domains

When we move into the study of individual radio signals, frequencydomain representations are equally useful. For instance, the bandwidth of a modulated signal generally has some fairly simple relationship to that of the baseband signal. This bandwidth can easily be found if the baseband signal can be represented in the frequency domain. As we proceed, we will see many other examples in which the ability to work with signals in the frequency domain will be required.

Fourier Series

It should be obvious by now that we need a way to move freely between the two domains. Any well-behaved periodic waveform can be represented as a series of sine and/or cosine waves at multiples of its fundamental frequency plus (sometimes) a dc offset. This is known as a Fourier series. This very useful (and perhaps rather surprising) fact was discovered in 1822 by Joseph Fourier, a French mathematician, in the course of research on heat conduction. Not all signals used in communication are strictly periodic, but they are often close enough for practical purposes. Fouriers discovery, applied to a time-varying signal, can be expressed mathematically as follows: (t ) = Ao + A1 cos t + B1 sin t + A2 cos 2t + B2 sin 2t 2 + A3 cos 3t + B3 sin 3t + (1.9)

where ( t ) = any well-behaved function of time. For our purposes, (t) will generally be either a voltage v(t) or a current i(t). A n and B n = real-number coefficients; that is, they can be positive, negative, or zero. = radian frequency of the fundamental.

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CHAPTER 1

The radian frequency can be found from the time-domain representation of the signal by finding the period (that is, the time T after which the whole signal repeats exactly) and using the equations: = and = 2 The simplest ac signal is a sinusoid. The frequency-domain representation of a sine wave has already been described and is shown in Figure 1.5 for a voltage sine wave with a period of 1 ms and a peak amplitude of 1 V. For this signal, all the Fourier coefficients are zero except for B 1 , which has a value of 1 V. The equation becomes: v ( t ) = sin (2000 t ) V which is certainly no surprise. The examples below use the equations for the various waveforms shown in Table 1.1 on page 15. 1

EXAMPLE 1.3

Y
Find and sketch the Fourier series corresponding to the square wave in Figure 1.6(a).

FIGURE 1.6

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

15

TABLE 1.1

Fourier Series for Common Repetitive Waveforms

1. Half-wave rectified sine wave

v (t ) =

V V cos 4t cos 6t 2V cos 2t + sin t + + + 2 13 35 57

2. Full-wave rectified sine wave (a) With time zero at voltage zero

v (t ) =

2V 4V cos 2t cos 4t cos 6t + + + 13 35 57

(b) With time zero at voltage peak

v (t ) =

2V 2 cos 2t 2 cos 4t 2 cos 6t + 1 + 13 35 57

3. Square wave (a) Odd function

v (t ) =

4V 1 1 sin t + sin 3t + sin 5t + 3 5

(continues)

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CHAPTER 1

TABLE 1.1

(continued)

(b) Even function

v (t ) = 4. Pulse train

1 4V 1 cos t cos 3t + cos 5t 5 3

v (t ) =

V 2V sin / sin 2 / sin 3/ + cos t + cos 2t + cos 3t + T T / 2 / 3/

5. Triangle wave

v (t ) =

8V 1 1 cos t + 2 cos 3t + 2 cos 5t + 2 3 5

6. Sawtooth wave (a) With no dc offset

v (t ) =

1 2V 1 sin 2t + sin 3t sin t 3 2

(continues)

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

17

TABLE 1.1

(continued)

(b) Positive-going

v (t ) =

1 1 V V sin 2t + sin 3t + sin t + 2 2 3

SOLUTION
A square wave is another signal with a simple Fourier representation, although not quite as simple as for a sine wave. For the signal shown in Figure 1.6(a), the frequency is 1 kHz, as before, and the peak voltage is 1 V. According to Table 1.1, this signal has components at an infinite number of frequencies: all odd multiples of the fundamental frequency of 1 kHz. However, the amplitude decreases with frequency, so that the third harmonic has an amplitude one-third that of the fundamental, the fifth harmonic an amplitude of one-fifth that of the fundamental, and so on. Mathematically, a square wave of voltage with a rising edge at t = 0 and no dc offset can be expressed as follows (see Table 1.1): v (t ) = where V = peak amplitude of the square wave = radian frequency of the square wave t = time in seconds For this example, the above equation becomes: v (t ) = 4 1 1 3 3 3 sin( 2 10 t ) + sin(6 10 t ) + sin(10 10 t ) + V 3 5 1 4V 1 sin t + sin 3t + sin 5t + 5 3

This equation shows that the signal has frequency components at odd multiples of 1 kHz, that is, at 1 kHz, 3 kHz, 5 kHz, and so on. The 1-kHz component has a peak amplitude of V1 = 4 = 127 . V

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CHAPTER 1

The component at three times the fundamental frequency (3 kHz) has an amplitude one-third that of the fundamental, that at 5 kHz has an amplitude one-fifth that of the fundamental, and so on. V3 = V5 = V7 = 4 = 0424 . V 3 4 = 0.255 V 5 4 = 0182 . V 7

The result for the first four components is sketched in Figure 1.6(b). Theoretically, an infinite number of components would be required to describe the square wave completely, but as the frequency increases, the amplitude of the components decreases rapidly.

X
The representations in Figures 1.6(a) and 1.6(b) are not two different signals but merely two different ways of looking at the same signal. This can be shown graphically by adding the instantaneous values of several of the sine waves in the frequency-domain representation. If enough of these components are included, the result begins to look like the square wave in the time-domain representation. Figure 1.7 shows the results for two, four, and ten components. It was created by taking the instantaneous values of all the components at the same time and adding them algebraically. This was done for a large number of time values. Doing these calculations by hand would be simple but rather tedious, so a computer was used to perform the calculations and plot the graphs. A perfectly accurate representation of the square wave would require an infinite number of components, but we can see from the figure that using ten terms gives a very good representation because the amplitudes of the higher-frequency components of the signal are very small. It is possible to go back and forth at will between time and frequency domains, but it should be apparent that information about the relative phases of the frequency components in the Fourier representation of the signal is required to reconstruct the time-domain representation. The Fourier equations do have this information, but the sketch in Figure 1.6(b) does not. If the phase relationships between frequency components are changed in a communication system, the signal will be distorted in the time domain. Figure 1.8 illustrates this point. The same ten coefficients were used as in Figure 1.7, but this time the waveforms alternated between sine and

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

19

FIGURE 1.7 Construction of a square wave from Fourier components

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CHAPTER 1

FIGURE 1.8

Addition of square-wave Fourier components with wrong phase angles

cosine: sine for the fundamental, cosine for the third harmonic, sine for the fifth, and so on. The result is a waveform that looks the same on the frequency-domain sketch of Figure 1.6(b) but very different in the time domain.

EXAMPLE 1.4
Find the Fourier series for the signal in Figure 1.9(a).

SOLUTION
The positive-going sawtooth wave of Figure 1.9(a) has a Fourier series with a dc term and components at all multiples of the fundamental frequency. From Table 1.1, the general equation for such a wave is v (t ) = A A 1 1 sin t + sin 2t + sin 3t + 2 2 3

The first (dc) term is simply the average value of the signal. For the signal in Figure 1.9, which has a frequency of 1 kHz and a peak amplitude of 5 V, the preceding equation becomes: v(t) = 2.5 1.59 (sin(2 103t) + 0.5 sin (4 103t) + 0.33 sin (6 103t) + ) V

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

21

FIGURE 1.9

The first four voltage components are: dc component: V0 = 2.5 V 1-kHz component: V1 = 1.59 V (the minus sign represents a phase angle of 180 degrees. A graph of peak values will not usually indicate signs, and a spectrum analyzer will not show phase angles) 2-kHz component: V2 = 1.59/2 = 0.795 V 3-kHz component: V3 = 1.59/3 = 0.53 V The spectrum is shown in Figure 1.9(b).

Effect of Filtering on Signals

As we have seen, many signals have a bandwidth that is theoretically infinite. Limiting the frequency response of a channel removes some of the frequency components and causes the time-domain representation to be distorted. An uneven frequency response will emphasize some components at the expense of others, again causing distortion. Nonlinear phase shift will also affect the time-domain representation. For instance, shifting the phase angles of some of the frequency components in the square-wave representation of Figure 1.8 changed the signal to something other than a square wave. However, Figure 1.7 shows that while an infinite bandwidth may theoretically be required, for practical purposes quite a good representation of a

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CHAPTER 1

square wave can be obtained with a band-limited signal. In general, the wider the bandwidth, the better, but acceptable results can be obtained with a band-limited signal. This is welcome news, because practical systems always have finite bandwidth.

Noise in the Frequency Domain

It was pointed out earlier, in Section 1.4, that noise power is proportional to bandwidth. That implies that there is equal noise power in each hertz of bandwidth. Sometimes this kind of noise is called white noise, since it contains all frequencies just as white light contains all colors. In fact, we can talk about a noise power density in watts per hertz of bandwidth. The equation for this is very simply derived. We start with Equation (1.3): P N = kTB This gives the total noise power in bandwidth, B . To find the power per hertz, we just divide by the bandwidth to get an even simpler equation: N 0 = kT where N 0 = noise power density in watts per hertz k = Boltzmanns constant, 1.38 10 23 joules/kelvin (J/K) T = temperature in kelvins (1.10)

EXAMPLE 1.5

Y
(a) A resistor has a noise temperature of 300 K. Find its noise power density and sketch the noise spectrum. (b) A system with a noise temperature of 300 K operates at a frequency of 100 MHz with a bandwidth of 1 MHz. Sketch the noise spectrum.

SOLUTION
(a) From Equation (1.10): N0 = kT = 1.38 1023 J/K 300 K = 4.14 1021 W/Hz The spectrum is shown in Figure 1.10(a). Note that the spectrum is a straight line, showing that the noise power density is the same at all frequencies. The frequency scale shown runs from 0 to 1 GHz, but theoretically the spectrum remains flat indefinitely. Real systems, of course, never have infinite frequency response.

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

23

FIGURE 1.10

(b) Here the noise power density is the same as in part (a) but only over the 1-MHz bandwidth illustrated. Hence the band-limited spectrum of Figure 1.10(b). The exact shape of the pattern will depend on the type of filter used. In the sketch an ideal filter, with complete attenuation outside the passband, is assumed.

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1.6

The Radio-Frequency Spectrum


Radio waves are a form of electromagnetic radiation, as are infrared, visible light, ultraviolet light, and gamma rays. The major difference is in the frequency of the waves. The portion of the frequency spectrum that is useful for radio communication at present extends from roughly 100 kHz to about 50 GHz. Table 1.2 shows the conventional designations of the various

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CHAPTER 1

TABLE 1.2

The Radio-Frequency Spectrum


Frequency Range 30300 GHz Wavelength Range 1 mm1 cm Wavelength Designation Millimeter Waves

Frequency Designation Extremely High Frequency (EHF) Super High Frequency (SHF)

330 GHz

110 cm

Microwaves (microwave region conventionally starts at 1 GHz)

Ultra High Frequency (UHF) Very High Frequency (VHF) High Frequency (HF) Medium Frequency (MF)

300 Mhz3 GHz

10 cm1 m

30300 MHz

110 m

330 MHz 300 kHz3 MHz

10100 m 100 m1 km

Short Waves Medium Waves

frequency ranges and their associated wavelength ranges. Note that microwaves and millimeter waves are wavelength designations and fit only approximately into the frequency designations. Wireless communication as described in this book occupies mainly the VHF, UHF, and SHF portions of the spectrum. Lower-frequency systems need inconveniently large antennas and involve methods of signal propagation that are undesirable for the systems we look at. Extremely high frequencies are still difficult to generate and amplify at reasonable cost, though that may well change in the future. Conversion between frequency and wavelength is quite easy. The general equation that relates frequency to wavelength for any wave is v = where v = velocity of propagation of the wave in meters per second = frequency of the wave in hertz = wavelength in meters (1.11)

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

25

For radio waves in free space (and air is generally a reasonable approximation to free space) the velocity is the same as that of light: 300 106 m/s. The usual symbol for this quantity is c. Equation (1.11) then becomes: c = (1.12)

EXAMPLE 1.6
Find the wavelength of a signal at each of the following frequencies: (a) 850 MHz (cell phone range) (b) 1.9 GHz (Personal Communication Systems range)

(c) 28 GHz (used for Local Multipoint Distribution Systems (LMDS) for local delivery of television signals by microwave)

SOLUTION
For all of these the method is the same. The problem is repeated to give the reader a feeling for some of the frequencies and wavelengths used in wireless communication. Simply rewrite Equation (1.12) in the form = (a) = (b) = (c) = c 300 106 = 0353 . m = 353 mm 850 106 300 106 . m = 158 mm = 0158 . 109 19 300 106 = 00107 . m = 107 . mm 28 109

X
Bandwidth Requirements
The carrier wave is a sine wave for almost any communication system. A sine wave, of course, exists at only one frequency and therefore occupies zero bandwidth. As soon as the signal is modulated to transmit information, however, the bandwidth increases. A detailed knowledge of the bandwidth of various types of modulated signals is essential to the understanding of the communication systems to be described in this book. Thorough study of signal bandwidths will have to wait until we know more about the modulation schemes referred to above. However, at this time it would be well to look at the concept of bandwidth in more general terms.

26

CHAPTER 1

First, bandwidth in radio systems is always a scarce resource. Not all frequencies are useful for a given communication system, and there is often competition among users for the same part of the spectrum. In addition, as we have seen, the degrading effect of noise on signals increases with bandwidth. Therefore, in most communication systems it is important to conserve bandwidth to the extent possible. There is a general rule known as Hartleys Law which relates bandwidth, time, and information content. We will not yet be able to use it for actual calculations, but it would be well to note it for future reference, as Hartleys Law applies to the operation of all communication systems. Here it is: I = ktB where I = amount of information to be transmitted in bits k = a constant that depends on the modulation scheme and the signal-to-noise ratio t = time in seconds B = bandwidth in hertz Our problem thus far is that we do not have precise ways of quantifying either the amount of information I or the constant k. However, the general form of the equation is instructive. It tells us that the rate at which information is transmitted is proportional to the bandwidth occupied by a communication system. To transmit more information in a given time requires more bandwidth (or a more efficient modulation scheme). (1.13)

EXAMPLE 1.7

Y
Telephone voice transmission requires transmission of frequencies up to about 3.4 kHz. Broadcast video using the ordinary North American standard, on the other hand, requires transmission of frequencies up to 4.2 MHz. If a certain modulation scheme needs 10 kHz for the audio transmission, how much bandwidth will be needed to transmit video using the same method?

SOLUTION
Hartleys Law states that bandwidth is proportional to information rate, which in this case is given by the baseband bandwidth. Assuming that audio needs a bandwidth from dc to 3.4 kHz, while video needs dc to 4.2 MHz, the bandwidth for video will be BTV = BTA BV BA

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

27

where BTV = transmission bandwidth for video BTA = transmission bandwidth for audio BV = baseband bandwidth for video BA = baseband bandwidth for audio Substituting the numbers from the problem we get BTV = BTA BV BA 4.2 MHz . kHz 34

= 10 kHz = 12.3 MHz

Obviously the type of baseband signal to be transmitted makes a great deal of difference to any spectrum management plan.

X
Hartleys Law also shows that it is possible to reduce the bandwidth required to transmit a given amount of information by using more time for the process. This is an important possibility where data must be sent, but of course it is not practical when real-time communication is requiredin a telephone call, for instance. The reader may have experienced this tradeoff of time for bandwidth in downloading an audio or video file from the internet. If the bandwidth of the connection is low, such a file may take much longer to download than it does to play.

Frequency Reuse

Spectrum space in wireless systems is nearly always in short supply. Even with the communication bandwidth restricted as much as possible, there is often more traffic than can be accommodated. Of course the spectrum used for a given purpose in one area can be reused for a different purpose in another area that is physically far enough away that signals do not travel from one area to the other with sufficient strength to cause unacceptable interference levels. How far that is depends on many factors such as transmitter power, antenna gain and height, and the type of modulation used. Many recent systems, such as cellular telephony, automatically reduce transmitter power to the minimum level consistent with reliable communication, thereby allowing frequencies to be reused at quite small distances. Such schemes can use spectrum very efficiently.

28

CHAPTER 1

'

1.7

Convergence and Wireless Communication


There has been much talk recently about convergence, the merger of all kinds of previously separate electronic systems, for example, telephony (both wireline and wireless), broadcast and cable television, and data communication (most notably the internet). Convergence does seem to be beginning to happen, though more slowly than many had anticipated. The process is slowed both by technical problems involving the very different types of signals and media used in fields that have evolved separately for many years, and by more mundane but equally serious problems of regulatory jurisdiction and commercial interests. It is by no means clear exactly how wireless communication will fit into the final picture, even if a field as dynamic as this can be imagined to have a final state. Some people (many of whom seem to work for wireless phone companies) have suggested that eventually wireless phones will replace wireline equipment, and everyone will have one phone (with one number) which they will carry with them everywhere. Wired communication will then do what it does best: carry high-bandwidth signals like television to fixed locations. On the other hand, there is very serious development work underway involving high-bandwidth wireless communication for world-wide web access from portable devices, for instance. If it is unclear even to the experts what the future holds, we must be careful in our predictions. This much is certain though: wireless communication will be a large part of the total communication picture, and a knowledge of the technologies involved will certainly help a technologist to understand future developments as they occur.

'

Summary

The main points to remember from this chapter are:


(

Any wireless communication system requires a transmitter and a receiver connected by a channel. Simplex communication systems allow communication in one direction only. Half-duplex systems are bidirectional, but work in only one direction at a time. Full-duplex systems can communicate in both directions simultaneously. Most wireless networks are variations of the star network configuration, often with radio repeaters at the hub. Radio systems transmit information by modulating a sine-wave carrier signal. Only three basic parameters can be modulated: amplitude, frequency, and phase. Many variations are possible, however.

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

29

The ratio of signal power to noise power is one of the most important specifications for any communication system. Thermal noise is the most important type of noise in most wireless systems. The frequency domain is useful for the observation and understanding of both signals and noise in communication systems. Many signals can be analyzed in the frequency domain with the aid of Fourier series. The bandwidth required by a system depends on the modulation scheme employed and the information transmission rate required. Bandwidth should be kept to the minimum necessary to reduce noise problems and to conserve radio-frequency spectrum. Convergence is a term describing the possible merger of many different kinds of communication and related technologies.

( Equation List
e(t) = Ec sin(ct + ) PN = kTB T(K) = T(C) + 273 NF = ( S/N )i ( S/N )o NF2 1 NF3 1 + + A1 A1A2 (1.1) (1.3) (1.4) (1.5)

NFT = NF1 +

(1.6)

Teq = 290(NF 1) (t ) = Ao + A1 cos t + B1 sin t + A2 cos 2t + B2 sin 2t 2 + A3 cos 3t + B3 sin 3t +

(1.8) (1.9)

N0 = kT v = c = I = ktB

(1.10) (1.11) (1.12) (1.13)

30

CHAPTER 1

( Key Terms
bandwidth baseband portion of frequency spectrum occupied by a signal information signal

carrier high-frequency signal which is modulated by the baseband signal in a communication system Citizens Band (CB) radio short-distance unlicensed radio communication system demodulation recovery of a baseband signal from a modulated signal Fourier series expression showing the structure of a signal in the frequency domain frequency domain method of analyzing signals by observing them on a power-frequency plane frequency-division multiplexing combining of several signals into one communication channel by assigning each a different carrier frequency full-duplex communication two-way communication in which both terminals can transmit simultaneously half-duplex communication two-way communication system in which only one station can transmit at a time handoff transfer of a call in progress from one cell site to another Improved Mobile Telephone Service (IMTS) a mobile telephone service, now obsolescent, using trunked channels but not cellular in nature intelligence information to be communicated modulating signal the information signal that is used to modulate a carrier for transmission network an organized system for communicating among terminals noise an unwanted random signal that extends over a considerable frequency spectrum noise power density source the power in a one-hertz bandwidth due to a noise

personal communication system (PCS) a cellular telephone system designed mainly for use with portable (hand-carried) telephones public switched telephone network (PSTN) phone system the ordinary public wireline

repeater a transmitter-receiver combination used to receive and retransmit a signal

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

31

signal-to-noise ratio ratio between the signal power and noise power at some point in a communication system simplex a unidirectional communication system; for example, broadcasting spectrum analyzer test instrument that typically displays signal power as a function of frequency star network a computer network topology in which each terminal is connected to a central mainframe or server time domain representation of a signal as a function of time and some other parameter, such as voltage white noise noise containing all frequencies with equal power in every hertz of bandwidth

( Questions
1. Why were the first radio communication systems used for telegraphy only? 2. When were the first two-way mobile radio communication systems installed, and for what purpose? 3. What characteristics of CB radio led to its great popularity? 4. Why are cellular radio systems more efficient in their use of spectrum than earlier systems? 5. What types of modulation are used with cellular phones? 6. Explain the differences among simplex, half-duplex, and full-duplex communication. 7. Identify each of the following communication systems as simplex, half-duplex, or full-duplex. (a) cordless telephone (b) television broadcast (c) intercom with push-to-talk bar 8. Why is it necessary to use a high-frequency carrier with a radio communication system? 9. Name the three basic modulation methods. 10. Suppose that a voice frequency of 400 Hz is transmitted using a transmitter operating at 800 MHz. Which of these is: (a) the information frequency? (b) the carrier frequency?

32

CHAPTER 1

(c) the baseband frequency? (d) the modulating frequency? 11. What effect does doubling the bandwidth of a system have on its noise level? 12. What is the meaning of the signal-to-noise ratio for a system, and why is it important? 13. What is the difference between the kelvin and Celsius temperature scales? 14. State whether the time or frequency domain would be more appropriate for each of the following: (a) a display of all UHF television channels (b) measuring the peak voltage of a waveform (c) measuring the bandwidth of a waveform (d) determining the rise time of a signal 15. What is meant by the term frequency-division multiplexing? 16. Why is thermal noise sometimes called white noise? 17. Give the frequency designation for each of the following systems: (a) marine radio at 160 MHz (b) cell phones at 800 MHz (c) direct-to-home satellite television at 12 GHz (d) CB radio at 27 Mhz

( Problems
1. Express the frequency of a 10-kHz signal in radians per second. 2. Find the noise power produced by a resistor at a temperature of 60 C in a bandwidth of 6 MHz in (a) watts (b) dBm (c) dBf 3. If the signal power at a certain point in a system is 2 W and the noise power is 50 mW, what is the signal-to-noise ratio, in dB? 4. Sketch the spectrum for the half-wave rectified signal in Figure 1.11, showing harmonics up to the fifth. Show the voltage and frequency scales and indicate whether your voltage scale shows peak or RMS voltage.

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

33

FIGURE 1.11

5. Sketch the frequency spectrum for the triangle wave shown in Figure 1.12 for harmonics up to the fifth. Show the voltage and frequency scales.
FIGURE 1.12

6. A 1-kHz square wave passes through each of three communication channels whose bandwidths are given below. Sketch the output in the time domain for each case. (a) 0 to 10 kHz (b) 2 kHz to 4 kHz (c) 0 to 4 kHz 7. Sketch the spectrum for the pulse train shown in Figure 1.13.
FIGURE 1.13

34

CHAPTER 1

8. Sketch the spectrum for the sawtooth waveform in Figure 1.14. Explain why this waveform has no dc component, unlike the sawtooth waveform in Example 1.3.
FIGURE 1.14

9. Visible light consists of electromagnetic radiation with free-space wavelengths between 400 and 700 nanometers (nm). Express this range in terms of frequency. 10. Equation (1.11) applies to any kind of wave. The velocity of sound waves in air is about 344 m/s. Calculate the wavelength of a sound wave with a frequency of 1 kHz.

Analog Modulation Schemes

Objectives
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
( ( ( ( ( (

Explain the concept of modulation. Describe the differences among analog modulation schemes. Analyze amplitude-modulated signals in the time and frequency domains. Analyze frequency-modulated signals in the frequency domain. Describe phase modulation. Explain the need for pre-emphasis and de-emphasis with FM signals.

36

CHAPTER 2

'

2.1

Introduction
In Chapter 1 we saw that modulation is necessary in order to transmit intelligence over a radio channel. A radio-frequency signal can be modulated by either analog or digital information. In either case, the information signal must change one or more of three parameters: amplitude, frequency, and phase. With the exception of Morse code transmission, which is digital though not binary, the earliest wireless communication systems used analog modulation, and these schemes are still very popular in such diverse areas as broadcasting and cellular telephony. Analog modulation schemes tend to be more intuitive and hence easier to understand than their digital variants, so they will be considered first. Of the analog schemes, amplitude modulation (AM) is simplest and was first historically, therefore, it seems logical to begin with it. Frequency modulation (FM) is more common in modern systems, so it will be discussed next. Finally, phase modulation (PM) is seen less often than the others in analog systems, but it is very common in digital communication, so we will introduce it here but leave the details for later.

'

2.2

Amplitude Modulation
An amplitude-modulated signal can be produced by using the instantaneous amplitude of the information signal (the baseband or modulating signal) to vary the peak amplitude of a higher-frequency signal. Figure 2.1(a) shows a baseband signal consisting of a 1-kHz sine wave, which can be combined with the 10-kHz carrier signal shown in Figure 2.1(b) to produce the amplitude-modulated signal of Figure 2.1(c). If the peaks of the individual waveforms of the modulated signal are joined, an envelope results that resembles the original modulating signal. It repeats at the modulating frequency, and the shape of each half (positive or negative) is the same as that of the modulating signal. Figure 2.1(c) shows a case where there are only ten cycles of the carrier for each cycle of the modulating signal. In practice, the ratio between carrier frequency and modulating frequency is usually much greater. For instance, an AM citizens band (CB) station would have a carrier frequency of about 27 MHz and a modulating frequency on the order of 1 kHz. A waveform like this is shown in Figure 2.2. Since there are thousands of cycles of the carrier for each cycle of the envelope, the individual RF cycles are not visible, and only the envelope can be seen.

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

37

FIGURE 2.1

Amplitude modulation

The AM envelope allows for very simple demodulation. All that is necessary is to rectify the signal to remove one-half of the envelope, then low-pass filter the remainder to recover the modulation. A simple but quite practical AM demodulator is shown in Figure 2.3. Because AM relies on amplitude variations, it follows that any amplifier used with an AM signal must be linear, that is, it must reproduce amplitude variations exactly. This principle can be extended to any signal that has an envelope. This point is important, because nonlinear amplifiers are typically less expensive and more efficient than linear amplifiers.

38

CHAPTER 2

FIGURE 2.2
AM envelope

FIGURE 2.3
AM demodulator

Time-Domain Analysis

Now that we understand the general idea of AM, it is time to examine the system in greater detail. We shall look at the modulated signal in both the time and frequency domains, as each method emphasizes some of the important characteristics of AM. The time domain is probably more familiar, so we begin there.

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

39

AM is created by using the instantaneous modulating signal voltage to vary the amplitude of the modulated signal. The carrier is almost always a sine wave. The modulating signal can be a sine wave, but is more often an arbitrary waveform, such as an audio signal. However, an analysis of sine-wave modulation is very useful, since Fourier analysis often allows complex signals to be expressed as a series of sinusoids. We can express the above relationship by means of an equation: v ( t ) = ( E c + e m ) sin c t where v ( t ) = instantaneous amplitude of the modulated signal in volts E c = peak amplitude of the carrier in volts e m = instantaneous amplitude of the modulating signal in volts c = the frequency of the carrier in radians per second t = time in seconds If the modulating (baseband) signal is a sine wave, Equation (2.1) has the following form: v ( t ) = ( E c + E m sin m t ) sin c t where E m = peak amplitude of the modulating signal in volts m = frequency of the modulating signal in radians per second and the other variables are as defined for Equation (2.1). (2.2) (2.1)

EXAMPLE 2.1

Y
A carrier with an RMS voltage of 2 V and a frequency of 1.5 MHz is modulated by a sine wave with a frequency of 500 Hz and amplitude of 1 V RMS. Write the equation for the resulting signal.

SOLUTION
First, note that Equation (2.2) requires peak voltages and radian frequencies. We can easily get these as follows: Ec = 2 2 V = 2.83 V Em = 2 1 V = 1.41 V

40

CHAPTER 2

c = 2 1.5 106 = 9.42 106 rad/s m = 2 500 = 3.14 103 rad/s So the equation is v(t) = (Ec + Em sin mt) sin ct = [2.83 + 1.41 sin (3.14 103t)] sin (9.42 106t) V

Modulation Index

The ratio between the amplitudes of the modulating signal and the carrier is defined as the modulation index, m. Mathematically, m = Em /Ec (2.3)

Modulation can also be expressed as a percentage, by multiplying m by 100. For example, m = 0.5 corresponds to 50% modulation. Substituting m into Equation (2.2) gives: v ( t ) = E c (1 + m sin m t ) sin c t (2.4)

EXAMPLE 2.2

Y
Calculate m for the signal of Example 2.1 and write the equation for this signal in the form of Equation (2.4).

SOLUTION
To avoid an accumulation of round-off errors we should go back to the original voltage values to find m. m = Em /Ec = 1/2 = 0.5 It is all right to use the RMS values for calculating this ratio, as the factors of 2, if used to find the peak voltages, will cancel. Now we can rewrite the equation: v(t) = Ec(1 + m sin mt) sin ct = 2.83 [1+ 0.5 sin (3.14 103t)] sin (9.42 106t) V

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

41

It is worthwhile to examine what happens to Equation (2.4) and to the modulated waveform, as m varies. To start with, when m = 0, Em = 0 and we have the original, unmodulated carrier. As m varies between 0 and 1, the changes due to modulation become more pronounced. Resultant waveforms for several values of m are shown in Figure 2.4. Note especially the result for m = 1 or 100%. Under these conditions the peak signal voltage will vary between zero and twice the unmodulated carrier amplitude.

FIGURE 2.4

Envelopes for various values of m

42

CHAPTER 2

Overmodulation

When the modulation index is greater than one, the signal is said to be overmodulated. There is nothing in Equation (2.4) that would seem to prevent E m from being greater than E c , that is, m greater than one. There are practical difficulties, however. Figure 2.5(a) shows the result of simply substituting m = 2 into Equation (2.4). As you can see, the envelope no longer resembles the modulating signal. Thus the type of demodulator described earlier no longer gives undistorted results, and the signal is no longer a full-carrier AM signal. Whenever we work with mathematical models, we must remember to keep checking against physical reality. This situation is a good example. It is possible to build a circuit that does produce an output that agrees with Equation (2.4) for m greater than 1. However, most practical AM modulators produce the signal shown in Figure 2.5(b) under these conditions. This waveform is completely useless for communication. In fact, if this signal were subjected to Fourier analysis, the sharp corners on the waveform as the output goes to zero on negative modulation peaks would be found to represent high-frequency components added to the original baseband signal. This type of overmodulation creates spurious frequencies known as splatter, which cause the modulated signal to have increased bandwidth. This can cause interference with a signal on an adjacent channel. From the foregoing, we can conclude that for full-carrier AM, m must be in the range from 0 to 1. Overmodulation creates distortion in the demodulated signal and may result in the signal occupying a larger bandwidth than normal. Since spectrum space is tightly controlled by law, overmodulation of an AM transmitter is actually illegal, and means must be provided to prevent it.

FIGURE 2.5

Overmodulation

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

43

Modulation Index for Multiple Modulating Frequencies

Practical AM systems are seldom used to transmit sine waves, of course. The information signal is more likely to be a voice signal, which contains many frequencies. When there are two or more sine waves of different, uncorrelated frequencies (that is, frequencies that are not multiples of each other) modulating a single carrier, m is calculated by using the equation mT = where m T = total resultant modulation index m 1 , m 2 , etc. = modulation indices due to the individual modulating components.
2 2 m1 + m2 +

(2.5)

EXAMPLE 2.3

Y
Find the modulation index if a 10-volt carrier is amplitude modulated by three different frequencies, with amplitudes of 1, 2, and 3 volts respectively.

SOLUTION
The three separate modulation indices are: m1 = 1/10 = 0.1 m2 = 2/10 = 0.2 m3 = 3/10 = 0.3 mT =
2 2 2 m1 + m2 + m3

. 2 + 0.2 2 + 03 . 2 = 01 . = 0374

Measurement of Modulation Index

If we let Em and Ec be the peak modulation and carrier voltages respectively, then we can see, from Equation (2.4), that the maximum envelope voltage is simply E max = E c (1 + m ) and the minimum envelope voltage is E min = E c (1 m ) (2.7) (2.6)

44

CHAPTER 2

Note, by the way, that these results agree with the conclusions expressed earlier: for m = 0, the peak voltage is Ec, and for m = 1, the envelope voltage ranges from 2Ec to zero. Applying a little algebra to the above expressions, it is easy to show that m = E max E min E max + E min (2.8)

Of course, doubling both Emax and Emin will have no effect on this equation, so it is quite easy to find m by displaying the envelope on an oscilloscope and measuring the maximum and minimum peak-to-peak values for the envelope voltage.

EXAMPLE 2.4
Calculate the modulation index for the waveform shown in Figure 2.2.

SOLUTION
It is easiest to use peak-to-peak values with an oscilloscope. From the figure we see that: E max = 150 mV p-p m = = E max E min E max + E min 150 70 150 + 70 E min = 70 mV p-p

= 0364 .

X
FrequencyDomain Analysis
So far we have looked at the AM signal exclusively in the time domain, that is, as it can be seen on an oscilloscope. In order to find out more about this signal, however, it is necessary to consider its spectral makeup. We could use Fourier methods to do this, but for a simple AM waveform it is easier, and just as valid, to use trigonometry. To start, we should observe that although both the carrier and the modulating signal may be sine waves, the modulated AM waveform is not a sine wave. This can be seen from a simple examination of the waveform of Figure 2.1(c). It is important to remember that the modulated waveform is not a sine wave when, for instance, trying to find RMS from peak voltages. The usual formulas, so laboriously learned in fundamentals courses, do not apply here!

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

45

If an AM signal is not a sine wave, then what is it? We already have a mathematical expression, given by Equation (2.4): v ( t ) = E c (1 + m sin m t ) sin c t Expanding it and using a trigonometric identity will prove useful. Expanding gives v ( t ) = E c sin c t + mE c sin c t sin m t The first term is just the carrier. The second can be expanded using the trigonometric identity sin A sin B = to give v (t ) = E c sin ct + mE c [cos( c m )t cos( c + m )t ] 2 1 [cos( A B) cos( A + B)] 2

which can be separated into three distinct terms: v (t ) = E c sin ct + mE c mE c cos( c m )t cos( c + m )t 2 2 (2.9)

We now have, in addition to the original carrier, two other sinusoidal waves, one above the carrier frequency and one below. When the complete signal is sketched in the frequency domain as in Figure 2.6, we see the carrier and two additional frequencies, one to each side. These are called, logically enough, side frequencies . The separation of each side frequency from the carrier is equal to the modulating frequency; and the relative amplitude of the side frequency, compared with the carrier, is proportional to m , becoming half the carrier voltage for m = 1. In a real situation there is generally more than one set of side frequencies, because there is more than one modulating frequency. Each modulating frequency produces two side frequencies. Those above the carrier can be grouped into a band of frequencies called the upper sideband . There is also a lower sideband, which looks like a mirror image of the upper, reflected in the carrier.
FIGURE 2.6
AM in the frequency domain

46

CHAPTER 2

From now on we will generally use the term sideband, rather than side frequency, even for the case of single-tone modulation, because it is more general and more commonly used in practice. Mathematically, we have: usb = c + m lsb = c m E lsb = E usb = where usb = upper sideband frequency lsb = lower sideband frequency E usb = peak voltage of the upper-sideband component E lsb = peak voltage of the lower-sideband component E c = peak carrier voltage mE c 2 (2.10) (2.11) (2.12)

EXAMPLE 2.5

Y
(a) A 1-MHz carrier with an amplitude of 1 volt peak is modulated by a 1-kHz signal with m = 0.5. Sketch the voltage spectrum. (b) An additional 2-kHz signal modulates the carrier with m = 0.2. Sketch the voltage spectrum.

SOLUTION
(a) The frequency scale is easy. There are three frequency components. The carrier is at: c = 1 MHz The upper sideband is at: usb = c + m = 1 MHz + 1 kHz = 1.001 MHz The lower sideband is at: lsb = c m = 1 MHz 1 kHz = 0.999 MHz

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

47

Next we have to determine the amplitudes of the three components. The carrier is unchanged with modulation, so it remains at 1 V peak. The two sidebands have the same peak voltage: E lsb = E usb = = mE c 2 05 . 1 2

= 0.25 V Figure 2.7(a) shows the solution. (b) The addition of another modulating signal at a different frequency simply adds another set of side frequencies. It does not change anything that was done in part (a). The new frequency components are at 1.002 and 0.998 MHz, and their amplitude is 0.1 volt. The result is shown in Figure 2.7(b).

FIGURE 2.7

X
Bandwidth
Signal bandwidth is one of the most important characteristics of any modulation scheme. In general, a narrow bandwidth is desirable. In any situation where spectrum space is limited, a narrow bandwidth allows more signals to be transmitted simultaneously than does a wider bandwidth. It also allows a narrower bandwidth to be used in the receiver. The receiver must have a wide enough bandwidth to pass the complete signal, including all the sidebands, or distortion will result. Since thermal noise is evenly distributed over the frequency domain, a narrower receiver bandwidth includes

48

CHAPTER 2

less noise and this increases the signal-to-noise ratio, unless there are other factors. The bandwidth calculation is very easy for AM. The signal extends from the lower side frequency, which is the difference between the carrier frequency and the modulation frequency, to the upper side frequency, at the sum of the carrier frequency and the modulation frequency. The difference between these is simply twice the modulation frequency. If there is more than one modulating frequency, the bandwidth is twice the highest modulating frequency. Mathematically, the relationship is: B = 2Fm where B = bandwidth in hertz F m = the highest modulating frequency in hertz (2.13)

EXAMPLE 2.6

Y
Citizens band radio channels are 10 kHz wide. What is the maximum modulation frequency that can be used if a signal is to remain entirely within its assigned channel?

SOLUTION
From Equation (2.13) we have B = 2 Fm so Fm = = B 2 10 kHz 2

= 5 kHz

Power Relationships

Power is important in any communication scheme, because the crucial signal-to-noise ratio at the receiver depends as much on the signal power being large as on the noise power being small. The power that is most important, however, is not the total signal power but only that portion that is used

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

49

to transmit information. Since the carrier in an AM signal remains unchanged with modulation, it contains no information. Its only function is to aid in demodulating the signal at the receiver. This makes AM inherently wasteful of power, compared with some other modulation schemes to be described later. The easiest way to look at the power in an AM signal is to use the frequency domain. We can find the power in each frequency component, then add to get total power. We shall assume that the signal appears across a resistance R , so that reactive volt-amperes can be ignored. We will also assume that the power required is average power. Suppose that the modulating signal is a sine wave. Then the AM signal consists of three sinusoids, the carrier and two sidebands, as shown in Figure 2.6. The power in the carrier is easy to calculate, since the carrier by itself is a sine wave. The carrier is given by the equation ec where e c = instantaneous carrier voltage E c = peak carrier voltage c = carrier frequency in radians per second Since Ec is the peak carrier voltage, the power developed when this signal appears across a resistance R is simply Ec 2 R E 2R
2 c 2

= E c sin c t

Pc = =

The next step is to find the power in each sideband. The two frequency components have the same amplitude, so they have equal power. Assuming sine-wave modulation, each sideband is a cosine wave whose peak voltage is given by Equation (2.12): E lsb = E usb = mE c /2 Since the carrier and both sidebands are part of the same signal, the sidebands appear across the same resistance, R , as the carrier. Looking at the lower sideband,

50

CHAPTER 2

Plsb =

2 E lsb 2R 2

mE c 2 = 2R = m 2 E c2 4 2R

m2 E c2 = 4 2R Plsb = Pusb = m2 Pc 4 (2.14)

Since the two sidebands have equal power, the total sideband power is given by m2 Psb = Pc 2 (2.15)

The total power in the whole signal is just the sum of the power in the carrier and the sidebands, so it is m2 Pt = Pc + Pc 2 or m2 Pt = Pc 1 + 2 These latest equations tell us several useful things:
(

(2.16)

The total power in an AM signal increases with modulation, reaching a value 50% greater than that of the unmodulated carrier for 100% modulation. The extra power with modulation goes into the sidebands: the carrier power does not change with modulation. The useful power, that is, the power that carries information, is rather small, being a maximum of one-third of the total signal power for 100% modulation and much less at lower modulation indices. For this reason, AM transmission is more efficient when the modulation index is as close to 1 as practicable.

ANALOG MODULATION SCHEMES

51

EXAMPLE 2.7

Y
An AM transmitter has a carrier power output of 50 W. What would be the total power produced with 80% modulation?

SOLUTION
m2 Pt = Pc 1 + 2 0.82 = 50 W 1 + 2 = 66 W

X
Measuring Modulation Index in the Frequency Domain

Since the ratio between sideband and carrier power is a simple function of m, it is quite possible to measure modulation index by observing the spectrum of an AM signal. The only complication is that spectrum analyzers generally display power ratios in decibels. The power ratio between sideband and carrier power can easily be found from the relation: Plsb dB = antilog 10 Pc where P c = carrier power P lsb = power in one sideband dB = difference between sideband and carrier signals, measured in dB (this number will be negative) Once the ratio between carrier and sideband power has been found, it is easy to find the modulation index from Equation (2.14): Plsb = m2 = m2 Pc 4 4 Plsb Pc Plsb Pc (2.18) (2.17)

m = 2

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Although the time-domain measurement described earlier is simpler and uses less-expensive equipment, frequency-domain measurement enables much smaller values of m to be found. A modulation level of 5%, for instance, would be almost invisible on an oscilloscope, but it is quite obvious, and easy to measure, on a spectrum analyzer. The spectrum analyzer also allows the contribution from different modulating frequencies to be observed and calculated separately.

EXAMPLE 2.8

Y
Calculate the modulation frequency and modulation index for the spectrum analyzer display shown in Figure 2.8.
FIGURE 2.8

SOLUTION
First let us find m. The difference between the carrier and either sideband is 2 divisions at 5 kHz/division, or 10 kHz. So m = 10 kHz. Next, we need to find the modulation index. The two sidebands have the same power, so we can use either. The spectrum analyzer is set for 10 dB/division, and each sideband is 1.5 divisions, or 15 dB, below the carrier. This corresponds to a power ratio of Plsb 15 = antilog 10 Pc = 0.0316

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From Equation (2.18), m = 2 Plsb Pc

= 2 00316 . = 0356 .

'

2.3

Suppressed-Carrier AM Systems
It is possible to improve the efficiency and reduce the bandwidth of an AM signal by removing the carrier and/or one of its sidebands. Recall from the previous section that the carrier has at least two-thirds of the power in an AM signal, but none of the information. This can be understood by noting that the presence of modulation has no effect on the carrier. Removing the carrier to create a double-sideband suppressed-carrier ( DSBSC ) AM signal should therefore result in a power gain for the information-carrying part of the signal of at least three (or about 4.8 dB), assuming that the power removed from the carrier could be put into the sidebands. Note also that the upper and lower sidebands are mirror images of each other, containing exactly the same information. Removing one of these sidebands would reduce the signal bandwidth by half. Assuming that the receiver bandwidth is also reduced by half, this should result in a reduction of the noise power by a factor of two (3 dB). Therefore, removing the carrier and one sideband should cause the resulting single-sideband suppressed-carrier AM ( SSBSC or just SSB ) signal to have a signal-to-noise improvement of 7.8 dB or more, compared with full-carrier double-sideband AM. It is quite practical to remove the carrier from an AM signal, provided it is re-inserted at the receiver. Removing one sideband is also effective, and there is no need to replace it. Single-sideband AM is quite popular for voice communication systems operating in the high-frequency range (330 MHz) and has also been used for terrestrial point-to-point microwave links carrying telephone and television signals. Figure 2.9 shows the idea. Figure 2.9(a) shows the baseband spectrum of a typical voice signal. In Figure 2.9(b) we have double-sideband suppressedcarrier AM (DSBSC). The carrier frequency of 1 MHz is indicated but there is no carrier, just the upper and lower sidebands. In Figure 2.9(c), the lower sideband has been removed and only the upper sideband is transmitted.

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FIGURE 2.9
DSB and SSB transmission

Since single-sideband is a variant of AM, an SSB signal does have an envelope and must be used with linear amplifiers. The envelope is different from that for a full-carrier AM signal, however. Figure 2.10 shows a signal with two modulation frequencies, called a two-tone test signal. Note that the envelope is caused by the algebraic addition of the two sideband components. Its frequency is that of the difference between the two modulating signal frequencies, in this case 2 kHz.

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FIGURE 2.10

Two-tone modulation

'

2.4

Frequency and Phase Modulation


Frequency modulation (FM) is probably the most commonly used analog modulation technique, seeing application in everything from broadcasting to cordless phones. Phase modulation (PM) is rarely used in analog systems but is very common in digital communication. Obviously, frequency and phase are very closely related, so it makes sense to discuss the two schemes together. In fact, they are often grouped under the heading of angle modulation.

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In our discussion of amplitude modulation, we found that the amplitude of the modulated signal varied in accordance with the instantaneous amplitude of the modulating signal. In FM it is the frequency, and in PM the phase of the modulated signal that varies with the amplitude of the modulating signal. This is important to remember: in all types of modulation it is the amplitude, not the frequency, of the baseband signal that does the modulating. The amplitude and power of an angle-modulation signal do not change with modulation. Thus, an FM signal has no envelope. This is actually an advantage; an FM receiver does not have to respond to amplitude variations, and this lets it ignore noise to some extent. Similarly, FM equipment can use nonlinear amplifiers throughout, since amplitude linearity is not important.

Frequency Modulation

Figure 2.11 demonstrates the concept of frequency modulation. Although a sine wave is mathematically simpler, a square-wave modulating signal is used in the figure to make the process easier to follow by eye. Figure 2.11(a) shows the unmodulated carrier and the modulating signal. Figure 2.11(b) shows the modulated signal in the time domain, as it would appear on an oscilloscope. The amount of frequency change has been exaggerated for clarity. The amplitude remains as before, and the frequency changes can be seen in the changing times between zero crossings for the waveforms. Figure 2.11(c) of the figure shows how the signal frequency varies with time in accordance with the amplitude of the modulating signal. Finally, in Figure 2.11(d) we see how the phase angle varies with time. When the frequency is greater than c , the phase angle of the signal gradually increases until it leads that of the carrier, and when the frequency is lower than c, the signal phase gradually lags that of the carrier. The maximum amount by which the transmitted frequency shifts in one direction from the carrier frequency is defined as the deviation . The total frequency swing is thus twice the deviation. A frequency modulation index, m, is also defined: m = where m = frequency modulation index = peak deviation in hertz m = modulating frequency in hertz m (2.19)

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The FM modulation index varies with the modulating frequency, unlike the case for AM. This choice of a definition for m causes the modulation index to be equal to the peak phase deviation in radians, which is inversely proportional to the modulating frequency. The modulation index for phase modulation is also defined as the peak phase deviation.

FIGURE 2.11

Frequency modulation

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EXAMPLE 2.9

Y
A cell phone transmitter has a maximum frequency deviation of 12 kHz. Calculate the modulation index if it operates at maximum deviation with a voice frequency of (a) 300 Hz (b) 2500 Hz

SOLUTION
(a) m = m 12 kHz = 300 Hz = 40 m 12 kHz = 2500 Hz = 4.8

(b)

m =

X
Note that there is no requirement for the FM (or PM) modulation index to be less than 1. When FM modulation is expressed as a percentage, it is the deviation as a percentage of the maximum allowed deviation that is being stated.

The Angle Modulation Spectrum

Frequency modulation produces an infinite number of sidebands, even for single-tone modulation. These sidebands are separated from the carrier by multiples of m, but their amplitude tends to decrease as their distance from the carrier frequency increases. Sidebands with amplitude less than about 1% of the total signal voltage can usually be ignored; for practical purposes an angle-modulated signal can be considered to be band-limited. In most cases, though, its bandwidth is much larger than that of an AM signal.

Bessel Functions

The equation for modulation of a carrier with amplitude A and radian frequency c by a single-frequency sinusoid is of the form v ( t ) = A sin ( c t + m sin m t ) (2.20)

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This equation cannot be simplified by ordinary trigonometry, as is the case for amplitude modulation. About the only useful information that can be gained by inspection is the fact that the signal amplitude remains constant regardless of the modulation index. This observation is significant, since it demonstrates one of the major differences between AM and FM or PM, but it provides no information about the sidebands. This signal can be expressed as a series of sinusoids by using Bessel functions of the first kind. Proving this is beyond the scope of this text, but it can be done. The Bessel functions themselves are rather tedious to evaluate numerically, but that, too, has been done. Some results are presented in Figure 2.12 and Table 2.1 shown on page 60. Bessel functions are equally valid for FM and PM systems, since the modulation index is equal to the peak phase deviation, in radians, for both techniques.

FIGURE 2.12
Bessel Functions

The table and graph of Bessel functions represent normalized voltages for the various frequency components of an FM signal. That is, the numbers in the tables will represent actual voltages if the unmodulated carrier has an amplitude of one volt. J0 represents the component at the carrier frequency. J1 represents each of the first pair of sidebands, at frequencies of c + m and c m. J2 represents the amplitude of each of the second pair of sidebands, which are separated from the carrier frequency by twice the modulating frequency, and so on. Figure 2.13 shows this on a frequency-domain plot. All of the Bessel terms should be multiplied by the voltage of the unmodulated carrier to find the actual sideband amplitudes. Of course, the

60

TABLE 2.1
m
0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1 1.25 1.5 1.75 2 2.25 2.4 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 6.5 7 7.5 8 8.5 8.65 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

Bessel Functions
J1
0.12 0.24 0.35 0.44 0.51 0.56 0.58 0.58 0.55 0.52 0.50 0.43 0.34 0.14 0.03 0.07 0.11 0.17 0.23 0.29 0.35 0.40 0.43 0.45 0.47 0.49 0.46 0.36 0.22 0.05 0.01 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.09 0.13 0.17 0.20 0.22 0.26 0.31 0.39 0.43 0.42 0.36 0.26 0.11 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.05 0.06 0.07 0.10 0.13 0.20 0.28 0.35 0.39 0.40 0.36 0.28 0.16 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.08 0.13 0.20 0.26 0.32 0.36 0.37 0.35 0.28 0.19 0.07 0.03 0.01 0.01 0.03 0.05 0.08 0.13 0.19 0.25 0.30 0.34 0.35 0.34 0.29 0.27 0.20 0.01 0.01 0.03 0.05 0.09 0.13 0.18 0.23 0.28 0.32 0.34 0.34 0.33 0.22 0.02 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.06 0.09 0.13 0.17 0.22 0.27 0.28 0.30 0.32 0.23 0.04 0.08 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.09 0.13 0.17 0.18 0.21 0.29 0.31 0.23 0.07 0.24 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.09 0.10 0.13 0.21 0.28 0.30 0.23 0.29 0.01 0.01 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.12 0.20 0.27 0.29 0.25 0.10 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.03 0.06 0.12 0.20 0.26 0.19 0.24 0.11 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.03 0.06 0.12 0.19 0.12 0.28 0.24 0.12 0.01 0.03 0.07 0.12 0.07 0.25 0.27 0.24 0.01 0.03 0.07 0.03 0.18 0.24 0.27 0.01 0.01 0.03 0.02 0.12 0.18 0.23 0.10 0.01 0.01 0.07 0.11 0.17 0.03 0.07 0.11 0.02 0.03 0.07 0.01 0.02 0.04 0.01

J0
1.00 0.98 0.94 0.86 0.77 0.65 0.51 0.37 0.22 0.08 0.00 0.05 0.26 0.38

J2

J3

J4

J5

J6

J7

J8

J9

J10

J11

J12

J13

J14

J15

J16

J17

J18

J19

J20

2.75 0.16

0.40 0.07 0.32 0.23 0.18 0.33

0.00 0.34 0.12 0.15 0.28 0.24

0.26 0.15 0.31 0.03 0.30 0.01 0.30 0.17 0.27 0.17 0.04 0.00 0.09 0.25 0.14 0.23 0.26 0.27 0.27 0.25 0.04

0.24 0.11 0.29 0.11 0.02 0.26 0.21 0.06 0.24 0.23 0.26 0.14

0.14 0.18 0.27 0.06

0.06 0.22 0.23 0.01 0.23 0.01 0.24 0.20 0.20 0.00 0.22

0.17 0.18

0.05 0.22 0.08 0.21 0.07 0.22 0.17 0.01 0.17 0.20 0.09

0.18 0.07 0.24 0.17 0.08 0.15 0.23 0.11 0.13 0.21 0.17 0.00

0.13 0.12 0.24 0.14

0.13 0.15 0.18

0.04 0.19 0.12 0.16

0.03 0.17 0.22 0.09 0.19

0.19 0.04 0.20 0.06 0.14 0.11 0.19

0.18 0.01 0.19 0.21 0.07

0.17 0.10

0.15 0.04 0.20 0.19 0.05

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FIGURE 2.13

FM in the frequency domain

Bessel coefficients are equally valid for peak or RMS voltages, but the user should be careful to keep track of which type of measurement is being used. When Bessel functions are used, the signal of Equation (2.20) becomes v(t) = A sin ( c t + m sin m t ) = A { J 0 ( m ) sin c t J 1 ( m )[sin ( c m ) t sin ( c + m ) t ] + J 2 ( m )[sin ( c 2 m ) t + sin ( c + 2 m ) t ] J 3 ( m )[sin ( c 3 m ) t + sin ( c + 3 m ) t ] + } (2.21) With angle modulation, the total signal voltage and power do not change with modulation. Therefore, the appearance of power in the sidebands indicates that the power at the carrier frequency must be reduced below its unmodulated value in the presence of modulation. In fact, the carrier-frequency component disappears for certain values of m (for example, 2.4 and 5.5). This constant-power aspect of angle modulation can be demonstrated using the table of Bessel functions. For simplicity, normalized values can be used. Let the unmodulated signal have a voltage of one volt RMS across a resistance of one ohm. Its power is, of course, one watt. When modulation is applied, the carrier voltage will be reduced and sidebands will appear. J0 from

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the table will represent the RMS voltage at the carrier frequency and the power at the carrier frequency will be Pc = = Vc2 R
2 J0 1

2 = J0

Similarly, the power in each of the first pair of sidebands will be


2 PSB1 = J1

The combined power in the first set of sidebands will be twice as much as this, of course. The power in the whole signal will then be
2 2 2 + 2 J1 + 2 J2 + PT = J 0

If the series is carried on far enough, the result will be equal to one watt, regardless of the modulation index. The bandwidth of an FM or PM signal is to some extent a matter of definition. The Bessel series is infinite, but as can be seen from the table or the graph, the amplitude of the components will gradually diminish until at some point they can be ignored. The process is slower for large values of m, so the number of sets of sidebands that has to be considered is greater for larger modulation indices. A practical rule of thumb is to ignore sidebands with a Bessel coefficient of less than 0.01. The bandwidth, for practical purposes, is equal to twice the number of the highest significant Bessel coefficient, multiplied by the modulating frequency.

EXAMPLE 2.10

Y
An FM signal has a deviation of 3 kHz and a modulating frequency of 1 kHz. Its total power is 5 W, developed across a 50 resistive load. The carrier frequency is 160 MHz. (a) Calculate the RMS signal voltage. (b) Calculate the RMS voltage at the carrier frequency and each of the first three sets of sidebands. (c) Calculate the frequency of each sideband for the first three sideband pairs. (d) Calculate the power at the carrier frequency, and in each sideband, for the first three pairs.

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(e) Determine what percentage of the total signal power is unaccounted for by the components described above. (f) Sketch the signal in the frequency domain, as it would appear on a spectrum analyzer. The vertical scale should be power in dBm, and the horizontal scale should be frequency.

SOLUTION
(a) The signal power does not change with modulation, and neither does the voltage, which can easily be found from the power equation. PT = VT = = VT2 RL PT RL 5 W 50

= 15.8 V(RMS) (b) The modulation index must be found in order to use Bessel functions to find the carrier and sideband voltages. m = = m

3 kHz 1 kHz = 3 From the Bessel function table, the coefficients for the carrier and the first three sideband pairs are: J0 = 0.26 J1 = 0.34 J2 = 0.49 J3 = 0.31

These are normalized voltages, so they will have to be multiplied by the total RMS signal voltage to get the RMS sideband and carrier-frequency voltages. For the carrier, Vc = J0VT J0 has a negative sign. This simply indicates a phase relationship between the components of the signal. It would be required if we wanted to add together all the components to get the resultant signal. For our present purpose, however, it can be ignored, and we can use Vc = J 0 VT = 0.26 15.8 V = 4.11 V

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Similarly we can find the voltage for each of the three sideband pairs. Note that these are voltages for individual components. There will be a lower and an upper sideband with each of these calculated voltages. V1 = J1VT = 0.34 15.8 V = 5.37 V V2 = J2VT = 0.49 15.8 V = 7.74 V V3 = J3VT = 0.31 15.8 V = 4.9 V (c) The sidebands are separated from the carrier frequency by multiples of the modulating frequency. Here, c = 160 MHz and m = 1 kHz, so there are sidebands at each of the following frequencies. USB1 = 160 MHz + 1 kHz = 160.001 MHz USB2 = 160 MHz + 2 kHz = 160.002 MHz USB3 = 160 MHz + 3 kHz = 160.003 MHz LSB1 = 160 MHz 1 kHz = 159.999 MHz LSB2 = 160 MHz 2 kHz = 159.998 MHz LSB3 = 160 MHz 3 kHz = 159.997 MHz (d) Since each of the components of the signal is a sinusoid, the usual equation can be used to calculate power. All the components appear across the same 50 load. Vc2 Pc = RL 4.112 50 = 0.338 W = Similarly, it can be shown that P1 = 0.576 W P2 = 1.2 W P3 = 0.48 W

(e) To find the total power in the carrier and the first three sets of sidebands, it is only necessary to add the powers calculated above, counting each of the sideband powers twice, because each of the calculated powers represents one of a pair of sidebands. We only count the carrier once, of course.

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PT = Pc + 2(P1 + P2 + P3) = 0.338 + 2(0.576 + 1.2 + 0.48) W = 4.85 W This is not quite the total signal power, which was given as 5 W. The remainder is in the additional sidebands. To find how much is unaccounted for by the carrier and the first three sets of sidebands, we can subtract. Call the difference Px. Px = 5 4.85 = 0.15 W As a percentage of the total power this is Px (%) = 015 . 100 5 = 3%

All the information we need for the sketch is on hand, except that the power values have to be converted to dBm using the equation P(dBm) = 10 log This gives Pc(dBm) = 10 log 338 = 25.3 dBm P1(dBm) = 10 log 576 = 27.6 dBm P2(dBm) = 10 log 1200 = 30.8 dBm P3(dBm) = 10 log 480 = 26.8 dBm The sketch is shown in Figure 2.14.
FIGURE 2.14

P 1 mW

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Bandwidth

For PM, the bandwidth varies directly with the modulating frequency, since doubling the frequency doubles the distance between sidebands. It is also roughly proportional to the maximum phase deviation, since increasing mp increases the number of sidebands. For FM, however, the situation is complicated by the fact that m = m

For a given amount of frequency deviation, the modulation index is inversely proportional to the modulating frequency. Recall that the frequency deviation is proportional to the amplitude of the modulating signal. Then, if the amplitude of the modulating signal remains constant, increasing its frequency reduces the modulation index. Reducing m reduces the number of sidebands with significant amplitude. On the other hand, the increase in m means that the sidebands will be further apart in frequency, since they are separated from each other by m. These two effects are in opposite directions. The result is that the bandwidth does increase somewhat with increasing modulating-signal frequency, but the bandwidth is not directly proportional to the frequency. Sometimes FM is called a constant-bandwidth communication mode for this reason, though the bandwidth is not really constant. Figure 2.15 provides a few examples that show the relationship between modulating frequency and bandwidth. For this example the deviation remains constant at 10 kHz as the modulating frequency varies from 2 kHz to 10 kHz. One other point must be made about the sidebands. With AM, restricting the bandwidth of the receiver has a very simple effect on the signal. Since the side frequencies farthest from the carrier contain the highfrequency baseband information, restricting the receiver bandwidth reduces its response to high-frequency baseband signals, leaving all else unchanged. When reception conditions are poor, bandwidth can be restricted to the minimum necessary for intelligibility. For FM the situation is more complicated, since even low-frequency modulating signals can generate sidebands that are far removed from the carrier frequency. FM receivers must be designed to include all the significant sidebands that are transmitted; otherwise severe distortion, not just limited frequency response, will result.

Carsons Rule

The calculation of the bandwidth of an FM signal from Bessel functions is easy enough, since the functions are available in a table, but it can be a bit tedious. There is an approximation, known as Carsons rule, that can be used to find the bandwidth of an FM signal. It is not as accurate as using Bessel functions, but can be applied almost instantly, without using tables or even a calculator.

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FIGURE 2.15

Variation of FM bandwidth with modulating frequency

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Here is Carsons rule: B 2[ (max) + m (max) ] (2.22)

Equation (2.22) assumes that the bandwidth is proportional to the sum of the deviation and the modulating frequency. This is not strictly true. Carsons rule also makes the assumption that maximum deviation occurs with the maximum modulating frequency. Sometimes this leads to errors in practical situations, where often the highest baseband frequencies have much less amplitude than lower frequencies, and therefore do not produce as much deviation.

EXAMPLE 2.11

Y
Use Carsons rule to calculate the bandwidth of the signal used in Example 2.10.

SOLUTION
Here there is only one modulating frequency, so B 2( + fm) = 2(3 kHz + 1 kHz) = 8 kHz In the previous example we found that 97% of the power was contained in a bandwidth of 6 kHz. An 8-kHz bandwidth would contain more of the signal power. Carsons rule gives quite reasonable results in this case, with very little work.

X
Narrowband and Wideband FM
We mentioned earlier that there are no theoretical limits to the modulation index or the frequency deviation of an FM signal. The limits are practical and result from a compromise between signal-to-noise ratio and bandwidth. In general, larger values of deviation result in an increased signal-to-noise ratio, while also resulting in greater bandwidth. The former is desirable, but the latter is not, especially in regions of the spectrum where frequency space is in short supply. It is also necessary to have some agreement about deviation, since receivers must be designed for a particular signal bandwidth. For these reasons, the bandwidth of FM transmissions is generally limited by government regulations that specify the maximum frequency deviation and the maximum modulating frequency, since both of these affect bandwidth. In general, relatively narrow bandwidth (on the order of 10 to

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30 kHz) is used for voice communication, with wider bandwidths for such services as FM broadcasting (about 200 kHz) and satellite television (36 MHz for one system).

FM and Noise

The original reason for developing FM was to give improved performance in the presence of noise, and that is still one of its main advantages over AM. This improved noise performance can actually result in a better signalto-noise ratio at the output of a receiver than is found at its input. One way to approach the problem of FM and noise is to think of the noise voltage as a phasor having random amplitude and phase angle. The noise adds to the signal, causing random variations in both the amplitude and phase angle of the signal as seen by the receiver. Figure 2.16 shows this vector addition.
FIGURE 2.16 Effect of noise on an FM signal

The amplitude component of noise is easily dealt with in a well-designed FM system. Since FM signals do not depend on an envelope for detection, the receiver can employ limiting to remove any amplitude variations from the signal. That is, it can use amplifiers whose output amplitude is the same for a wide variety of input signal levels. The effect of this on the amplitude of a noisy signal is shown in Figure 2.17. As long as the signal amplitude is

FIGURE 2.17

Limiting

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considerably larger than the noise to begin with, the amplitude component of the noise will not be a problem. It is not possible for the receiver to ignore phase shifts, however. A PM receiver obviously must respond to phase changes, but so will an FM receiver because, as we have seen, phase shifts and frequency shifts always occur together. Therefore, phase shifts due to noise are associated with frequency shifts that will be interpreted by the receiver as part of the modulation. Figure 2.18 shows the situation at the input to the receiver. The circle represents the fact that the noise phasor has a constantly changing angle with respect to the signal. Its greatest effect, and thus the peak phase shift to the signal, will occur when the noise phasor is perpendicular to the resultant. At that time, the phase shift due to noise is E N = sin 1 N ES
FIGURE 2.18 Phase shift due to noise

(2.23)

(EN/ES) is the reciprocal of the voltage signal-to-noise ratio at the input. A little care is needed here, as S/N is usually given as a power ratio, in decibels, and will have to be converted to a voltage ratio before being used in Equation (2.23). Equation (2.23) can be simplified as long as the signal is much larger than the noise. This will cause the phase deviation to be small, and for small angles the sine of the angle is approximately equal to the angle itself, in radians. Thus in a practical situation we can use N EN ES (2.24)

The phase shift due to noise can be reduced by making the signal voltage, relative to the noise voltage, as large as possible. This requires increased transmission power, a better receiver noise figure, or both. Perhaps less obvious is the fact that the relative importance of phase shifts due to noise can be reduced by having the phase shifts in the signal as large as possible. This is accomplished by keeping the value of m high, since m represents the peak

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phase shift in radians. It would seem that the ratio of signal voltage to noise voltage at the output would be proportional to m, and this is approximately true under strong-signal conditions.

EXAMPLE 2.12

Y
An FM signal has a frequency deviation of 5 kHz and a modulating frequency of 1 kHz. The signal-to-noise ratio at the input to the receiver detector is 20 dB. Calculate the approximate signal-to-noise ratio at the detector output.

SOLUTION
First, notice the word approximate. Our analysis is obviously a little simplistic, since noise exists at more than one frequency. We are also going to assume that the detector is completely unresponsive to amplitude variations and that it adds no noise of its own. Our results will not be precise but they will show the process that is involved. First, let us convert 20 dB to a voltage ratio. ( S/N )(dB ) ES = log 1 EN 20 = log 1 = 10 EN 1 = ES 10 = 01 . Since ES >> EN, we can use Equation (2.24). N EN ES = 01 . rad 20 20

Remembering that the receiver will interpret the noise as an FM signal with a modulation index equal to N, we find m N = 0.1 This can be converted into an equivalent frequency deviation N due to the noise. N = mm = 0.1 1 kHz = 100 Hz

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The frequency deviation due to the signal is given as 5 kHz, and the receiver output voltage is proportional to the deviation. Therefore, the output S/N as a voltage ratio will be equal to the ratio between the deviation due to the signal and that due to the noise. S ES = EN N 5 kHz 100 Hz = 50 = Since S/N is nearly always expressed in decibels, change this to dB. (S/N)o (dB) = 20 log 50 = 34 dB

This is an improvement of 14 dB over the S/N at the input.

X
Threshold Effect and Capture Effect
An FM signal can produce a better signal-to-noise ratio at the output of a receiver than an AM signal with a similar input S/N , but this is not always the case. The superior noise performance of FM depends on there being a sufficient input S/N ratio. There exists a threshold S/N below which the performance is no better than AM. In fact, it is worse, because the greater bandwidth of the FM signal requires a wider receiver noise bandwidth. When the signal strength is above the threshold, the improvement in noise performance for FM can be more than 20 dB compared with AM. The noise-rejection characteristic of FM applies equally well to interference. As long as the desired signal is considerably stronger than the interference, the ratio of desired to interfering signal strength will be greater at the output of the detector than at the input. We could say that the stronger signal captures the receiver, and in fact this property of FM is usually called the capture effect. It is very easy to demonstrate with any FM system. For example, it is the reason that there is less interference between cordless telephones, which share a few channels in the 46- and 49-MHz bands, than one might expect. An FM receiver interprets the phase shifts due to noise as frequency modulation. Phase and frequency deviation are related by Equation (2.19): m = m

Pre-emphasis and De-emphasis

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which can be restated = m m The modulation index m is simply the peak phase deviation in radians. The frequency deviation is proportional to the modulating frequency. This tells us, if the phase deviation due to thermal noise is randomly distributed over the baseband spectrum, the amplitude of the demodulated noise will be proportional to frequency. This relationship between noise voltage and frequency is shown in Figure 2.19. Since power is proportional to the square of voltage, the noise power will have the parabolic spectrum shown in Figure 2.19. An improvement in S/N can be made by boosting (preemphasizing) the higher frequencies in the baseband signal before modulation, with a corresponding cut in the receiver after demodulation. Obviously it is necessary to use similar filter characteristics for pre- and de-emphasis. Usually simple first-order filters are used.
FIGURE 2.19 Spectrum of demodulated noise

Note that pre-emphasis and de-emphasis are unnecessary with phase modulation. Since the phase deviation due to noise is converted directly into baseband noise output without the intermediate step of conversion into an equivalent frequency deviation, the output noise will have a flat spectrum, assuming thermal noise at the input to the demodulator.

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'

Summary

The main points to remember from this chapter are:


(

In the time domain, the process of amplitude modulation creates a signal with an envelope that closely resembles the original information signal. In the frequency domain, an amplitude-modulated signal consists of the carrier, which is unchanged from its unmodulated state, and two sidebands. The total bandwidth of the signal is twice the maximum modulating frequency. An amplitude-modulated signal can be demodulated by an envelope detector, which consists of a diode followed by a lowpass filter. The peak voltage of an amplitude-modulated signal varies with the modulation index, becoming twice that of the unmodulated carrier for the maximum modulation index of 1. The power in an amplitude-modulated signal increases with modulation. The extra power goes into the sidebands. At maximum modulation, the total power is 50% greater than the power in the unmodulated carrier. Angle modulation includes frequency and phase modulation, which are closely related. Frequency modulation is widely used for analog communication, while phase modulation sees greatest application in data communication. The power of an angle-modulation signal does not change with modulation, but the bandwidth increases due to the generation of multiple sets of sidebands. The voltage and power of each sideband can be calculated using Bessel functions. An approximate bandwidth is given by Carsons rule. Frequency modulation has a significant advantage compared with AM in the presence of noise or interference, provided the deviation is relatively large and the signal is reasonably strong. The signal-to-noise ratio for FM can be improved considerably by using pre-emphasis and de-emphasis. This involves greater gain for the higher baseband frequencies before modulation, with a corresponding reduction after demodulation.

( Equation List
v(t) = (Ec + Em sin mt) sin ct m = Em/Ec v(t) = Ec(1 + m sin mt) sin ct (2.2) (2.3) (2.4)

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75

mT =

2 2 m1 + m2 +

(2.5) (2.6) (2.7) (2.8)

Emax = Ec(1 + m) Emin = Ec(1 m) m = E max E min E max + E min mE c mE c cos( c m )t cos( c + m )t 2 2

v (t ) = E c sin ct + usb = c + m lsb = c m E lsb = E usb = B = 2fm Plsb = Pusb = m2 Pc 2 m2 Pc 4 mE c 2

(2.9) (2.10) (2.11) (2.12) (2.13) (2.14)

PSB =

(2.15)

m2 Pt = Pc 1 + 2 m = 2 Plsb Pc

(2.16)

(2.18)

m =

(2.19)

v(t) = A sin (ct + m sin mt) = A {J0(m) sin ct J1(m)[sin (c m)t sin (c + m)t] + J2(m) [sin (c 2m)t + sin (c + 2m)t] J3(m)[sin (c 3m)t + sin (c + 3 m)t] + }

(2.21)

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B 2[(max) + m(max)] N EN ES

(2.22) (2.24)

( Key Terms
angle modulation term that applies to both frequency modulation (FM) and phase modulation (PM) of a transmitted signal capture effect tendency of an FM receiver to receive the strongest signal and reject others deviation in FM, the peak amount by which the instantaneous signal frequency differs from the carrier frequency in each deviation envelope imaginary pattern formed by connecting the peaks of individual RF waveforms in an amplitude-modulated signal frequency modulation modulation scheme in which the transmitted frequency varies in accordance with the instantaneous amplitude of the information signal frequency modulation index signal, in radians modulation index modulated peak phase shift in a frequency-modulated

number indicating the degree to which a signal is

overmodulation modulation to an extent greater than that allowed for either technical or regulatory reasons phase modulation communication system in which the phase of a highfrequency carrier is varied according to the amplitude of the baseband (information) signal side frequencies frequency components produced above and below the carrier frequency by the process of modulation sideband a group of side frequencies above or below the carrier frequency splatter frequency components produced by a transmitter that fall outside its assigned channel

( Questions
1. What is meant by the envelope of an AM waveform, and what is its significance?

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77

2. Although amplitude modulation certainly involves changing the amplitude of the signal; it is not true to say that the amplitude of the carrier is modulated. Explain this statement. 3. Why is it desirable to have the modulation index of an AM signal as large as possible, without overmodulating? 4. Describe what happens when a typical AM modulator is overmodulated, and explain why overmodulation is undesirable. 5. How does the bandwidth of an AM signal relate to the information signal? 6. Describe two ways in which the modulation index of an AM signal can be measured. 7. By how much does the power in an AM signal increase with modulation, compared to the power of the unmodulated carrier? 8. What two types of modulation are included in the term angle modulation? 9. Compare, in general terms, the bandwidth and signal-to-noise ratio of FM and AM. 10. Describe and compare two ways to determine the practical bandwidth of an FM signal. 11. What is pre-emphasis and how is it used to improve the signal-to-noise ratio of FM transmissions? 12. For FM, what characteristic of the modulating signal determines the instantaneous frequency deviation? 13. What is the capture effect? 14. Where is phase modulation used? 15. Explain why the signal-to-noise ratio of FM can increase with the bandwidth. Is this always true for FM? Compare with the situation for AM. 16. Compare the effects of modulation on the carrier power and the total signal power in FM and AM. 17. What is the threshold effect? 18. Explain how limiting reduces the effect of noise on FM signals. 19. Explain how noise affects FM signals even after limiting. 20. Explain the fact that there is no simple relationship between modulating frequency and bandwidth for an FM signal. 21. Why does limiting the receiver bandwidth to less than the signal bandwidth cause more problems with FM than with AM?

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( Problems
1. An AM signal has the equation: v(t) = (15 + 4 sin 44 103t) sin 46.5 106t volts (a) Find the carrier frequency. (b) Find the frequency of the modulating signal. (c) Find the value of m. (d) Find the peak voltage of the unmodulated carrier. (e) Sketch the signal in the time domain showing voltage and time scales. 2. An AM signal has a carrier frequency of 3 MHz and an amplitude of 5 V peak. It is modulated by a sine wave with a frequency of 500 Hz and a peak voltage of 2 V. Write the equation for this signal and calculate the modulation index. 3. An AM signal consists of a 10-MHz carrier modulated by a 5-kHz sine wave. It has a maximum positive envelope voltage of 12 V and a minimum of 4 V. (a) Find the peak voltage of the unmodulated carrier. (b) Find the modulation index and percent. (c) Sketch the envelope. (d) Write the equation for the signal voltage as a function of time. 4. An AM transmitter is modulated by two sine waves, at 1 kHz and 2.5 kHz, with a modulation due to each of 25% and 50% respectively. What is the effective modulation index? 5. For the AM signal sketched in Figure 2.20, calculate: (a) the modulation index (b) the peak carrier voltage (c) the peak modulating-signal voltage 6. For the signal of Figure 2.21, calculate: (a) the index of modulation (b) the RMS voltage of the carrier without modulation 7. An audio system requires a frequency response from 50 Hz to15 kHz for high fidelity. If this signal were transmitted using AM, what bandwidth would it require? 8. A transmitter operates with a carrier frequency of 7.2 MHz. It is amplitude modulated by two tones with frequencies of 1500 Hz and 3000 Hz. What frequencies are produced at its output?

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79

FIGURE 2.20

FIGURE 2.21

9. Sketch the signal whose equation is given in Problem 1 in the frequency domain, showing frequency and voltage scales. 10. An AM signal has the following characteristics: c = 150 MHz For this signal, find: (a) the modulation index (b) the bandwidth (c) the peak voltage of the upper sideband 11. An AM signal observed on a spectrum analyzer shows a carrier at + 12 dBm, with each of the sidebands 8 dB below the carrier. Calculate: (a) the carrier power in milliwatts (b) the modulation index 12. An AM transmitter with a carrier power of 10 W at a frequency of 25 MHz operates into a 50- load. It is modulated at 60% by a 2-kHz sine wave. (a) Sketch the signal in the frequency domain. Show power and frequency scales. The power scale should be in dBm. (b) What is the total signal power? (c) What is the RMS voltage of the signal? m = 3 kHz Ec = 50 V Em = 40 V

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13. A 5-MHz carrier is modulated by a 5-kHz sine wave. Sketch the result in both frequency and time domains for each of the following types of modulation. Time and frequency scales are required, but amplitude scales are not. (a) DSB full-carrier AM (b) DSBSC AM (c) SSBSC AM (USB) 14. If a transmitter power of 100 W is sufficient for reliable communication over a certain path using SSB, approximately what power level would be required using: (a) DSBSC (b) full-carrier AM 15. An AM transmitter has a carrier power of 50 W at a carrier frequency of 12 MHz. It is modulated at 80% by a 1-kHz sine wave. (a) How much power is contained in the sidebands? (b) Suppose the transmitter in part (a) can also be used to transmit a USB signal with an average power level of 50 watts. By how much (in dB) will the signal-to-noise ratio be improved when the transmitter is used in this way, compared with the situation in part (a)? 16. An FM signal has a deviation of 10 kHz and a modulating frequency of 2 kHz. Calculate the modulation index. 17. Calculate the frequency deviation for an FM signal with a modulating frequency of 5 kHz and a modulation index of 2. 18. A sine-wave carrier at 100 MHz is modulated by a 1-kHz sine wave. The deviation is 100 kHz. Draw a graph showing the variation of instantaneous modulated signal frequency with time. 19. A phase-modulated signal has a modulation index of 2 with a modulating signal having an amplitude of 100 mV and a frequency of 4 kHz. What would be the effect on the modulation index of: (a) changing the frequency to 5 kHz (b) changing the voltage to 200 mV 20. An FM signal has a deviation of 10 kHz and is modulated by a sine wave a frequency of 5 kHz. The carrier frequency is 150 MHz, and the signal has a total power of 12.5 W, operating into an impedance of 50 . (a) What is the modulation index? (b) How much power is present at the carrier frequency?

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81

(c) What is the voltage level of the second sideband below the carrier frequency? (d) What is the bandwidth of the signal, ignoring all components which have less than 1% of the total signal voltage? 21. An FM transmitter operates with a total power of 10 watts, a deviation of 5 kHz, and a modulation index of 2. (a) What is the modulating frequency? (b) How much power is transmitted at the carrier frequency? (c) If a receiver has a bandwidth sufficient to include the carrier and the first two sets of sidebands, what percentage of the total signal power will it receive? 22. An FM transmitter has a carrier frequency of 220 MHz. Its modulation index is 3 with a modulating frequency of 5 kHz. The total power output is 100 watts into a 50 load. (a) What is the deviation? (b) Sketch the spectrum of this signal, including all sidebands with more than 1% of the signal voltage. (c) What is the bandwidth of this signal according to the criterion used in part (b)? (d) Use Carsons rule to calculate the bandwidth of this signal, and compare with the result found in part (c). 23. An FM transmitter has a carrier frequency of 160 MHz. The deviation is 10 kHz and the modulation frequency is 2 kHz. A spectrum analyzer shows that the carrier-frequency component of the signal has a power of 5 W. What is the total signal power? 24. Use Carsons rule to compare the bandwidth that would be required to transmit a baseband signal with a frequency range from 300 Hz to 3 kHz using: (a) narrowband FM with maximum deviation of 5 kHz (b) wideband FM with maximum deviation of 75 kHz 25. An FM receiver operates with a signal-to-noise ratio of 30 dB at its detector input and is operating with m = 10. (a) If the received signal has a voltage of 10 mV, what is the amplitude of the noise voltage? (b) Find the maximum phase shift that could be given to the signal by the noise voltage. (c) Calculate the signal-to-noise ratio at the detector output, assuming the detector is completely insensitive to amplitude variations.

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26. A certain full-carrier DSB AM signal has a bandwidth of 20 kHz. What would be the approximate bandwidth required if the same information signal were to be transmitted using: (a) DSBSC AM (b) SSB (c) FM with 10 kHz deviation (d) FM with 50 kHz deviation 27. Using the table of Bessel functions, demonstrate that the total power in an FM signal is equal to the power in the unmodulated carrier for m = 2. Compare with the situation for full-carrier AM and for SSBSC AM. 28. Suppose you were called upon to recommend a modulation technique for a new communication system for voice frequencies. State which of the techniques studied so far you would recommend, and why, in each of the following situations: (a) simple, cheap receiver design is of greatest importance (b) narrow signal bandwidth is of greatest importance (c) immunity to noise and interference is of greatest importance

Digital Communication

Objectives
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
(

Compare analog and digital communication techniques and discuss the advantages of each. Calculate the minimum sampling rate for a signal and explain the necessity for sampling at that rate or above. Find the spurious frequencies produced by aliasing when the sample rate is too low. Describe the common types of analog pulse modulation. Describe pulse-code modulation and calculate the number of quantizing levels, the bit rate, and the dynamic range for PCM systems. Explain companding, show how it is accomplished, and explain its effects. Describe the coding and decoding of a PCM signal. Describe differential PCM and explain its operation and advantages. Describe delta modulation and explain the advantages of adaptive delta modulation. Distinguish between lossless and lossy compression and provide examples of each. Describe the operation of common types of vocoders.

( (

( ( ( (

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'

3.1

Introduction
In the previous chapter we looked at analog modulation techniques. These were historically the earliest ways to transmit information by radio, and they are still very popular. However, recent developments have made digital methods more important, to the point where it is expected that most new wireless communication systems will be digital. In this chapter we will look at the digital encoding of analog signals. Voice is a good example of such a signal; it begins and ends as analog information. Once coded digitally, the analog signal is indistinguishable from any other data stream, such as a word-processing document. In Chapter 4 we will look at the transmission of this data by radio. While the advantage of digital transmission for data is self-evident, it is not immediately obvious why it is desirable to go to the trouble and expense of converting analog signals to digital form and back again. There are in fact several very good reasons for doing so. Here are some of the most important for wireless communication systems.
(

Digital signals can be manipulated more easily than analog signals. They are easier to multiplex, for instance. Digital signals can easily be encrypted to ensure privacy. When an analog signal goes through a chain of signal processors, such as transmitters, receivers, and amplifiers, noise and distortion accumulate. This process can be made much less severe in digital systems by regenerating the signal and by using various types of error control. These concepts will be explained in more detail later in this chapter. Data compression can be used with a digital signal to reduce its bandwidth to less than that required to transmit the original analog signal. Until recently the use of digital techniques was restricted because digital communication required more bandwidth than analog. That situation has changed quite radically in recent years.

( (

You might have noticed that higher fidelity and improved frequency response do not appear in the above list. It is certainly true that some digital schemes, such as compact disc audio, have better fidelity than some analog schemes, like FM broadcasts; but this is not always the case. The distortion and frequency response of a digital audio system are fixed by the sampling process, which will be described in the next section. The quality of the reproduction can be predicted quite accurately, and the use of regeneration and error correction can prevent it from deteriorating very much, but not all digital transmission is of high quality. For instance, whether you know it or not you have been communicating digitally for years: practically

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85

all modern telephone switches are digital. Digital telephony sounds pretty good, for a telephone call, but does not compare with compact disc audio. We will find out why in the next sections.

'

3.2

Sampling
An analog signal varies continuously with time. If we want to transmit such a signal digitally, that is, as a series of numbers, we must first sample the signal. This involves finding its amplitude at discrete time intervals. Only in this way can we arrive at a finite series of numbers to transmit.

Sampling Rate

In 1928, Harry Nyquist showed mathematically that it is possible to reconstruct a band-limited analog signal from periodic samples, as long as the sampling rate is at least twice the frequency of the highest-frequency component of the signal. This assumes that an ideal low-pass filter prevents higher frequencies from entering the sampler. Since real filters are not ideal, in practice the sampling rate must be considerably more than twice the maximum frequency to be transmitted. If the sampling rate is too low, a form of distortion called aliasing or foldover distortion is produced. In this form of distortion, frequencies in the sampled signal are translated downward. Figure 3.1 shows what happens. In Figure 3.1(a) the sampling rate is adequate and the signal can be reconstructed. In Figure 3.1(b), however, the rate is too low and the attempt to reconstruct the original signal results in a lower-frequency output signal. Once aliasing is present, it cannot be removed. The frequency of the interference generated by aliasing is easier to see by looking at the frequency domain. For simplicity, assume that the signal to be sampled, which we will call the baseband signal, is a sine wave: e b = E b sin b t where e b = instantaneous baseband signal voltage E b = peak baseband signal voltage b = the radian frequency of the baseband signal The sampling process is equivalent to multiplying the baseband signal by a pulse train at the sampling frequency. See Figure 3.2. For simplicity, assume that the pulses have an amplitude of one volt. Then, when a pulse is (3.1)

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FIGURE 3.1

Aliasing

present, the output of the sampler will be the same as the baseband signal amplitude, and when there is no pulse, the sampler output will be zero. The spectrum for the pulse train in Figure 3.2 is given in Chapter 1 as:
es = = sin 3/ T sin 2/ T 1 1 sin / T cos 3 st + cos 2 st + cos st + +2 3/ T / T 2/ T T T 2 sin 3/ T 1 2 sin / T sin 2/ T cos 2 st + cos 3 st + + cos st + 3 T

(3.2)

where es T s = = = = instantaneous voltage of the sampling pulse pulse duration pulse period radian frequency of the pulse train

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87

FIGURE 3.2 Sampling pulses

Multiplying the two signals given in Equations (3.1) and (3.2) together gives the following output: v (t ) = 2 E b sin / T Eb sin bt + sin bt cos s t T + + E b sin 2 / T sin bt cos 2 s t 2 E b sin 3 / T sin bt cos 3 s t 3 (3.3)

As is often the case with equations of this type, we do not have to solve anything to understand what is happening. The first term is simply the original baseband signal multiplied by a constant. If only this term were present, the original signal could be recovered from the sampled signal. However, we need to look at the other terms to see whether they will interfere with the signal recovery. The second term contains the product of sin bt and cos st. Recall the trigonometric identities: sin A cos B = and sin( A) = sin A (3.5) 1 [sin( A B) + sin( A + B)] 2 (3.4)

Equation (3.5) can be used to express Equation (3.4) in a more convenient form for the problem at hand. Substituting Equation (3.5) into Equation (3.4) gives: sin A cos B = 1 [sin( B + A) sin( B A)] 2 (3.6)

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This new identity can be used to expand the second term of Equation (3.3) as follows: 2 E b sin / T sin bt cos s t = = E b sin / T [sin( s + b )t sin( s b )t ] E b sin / T E sin / T sin( s + b )t b sin( s b )t (3.7)

Now we can see that this term consists of components at the sum and difference of the baseband and sampling frequencies. The sum term can easily be eliminated by a low-pass filter, since its frequency is obviously much higher than the baseband. The difference term is more interesting. If ws > 2b, then s b > b and the difference part of this term can also be removed by a low-pass filter, at least in theory. However, if s < 2b, the difference will be less than b. An aliased component will appear as a = s b (3.8)

and low-pass filtering will not be effective in removing it. The other terms in Equation (3.3) are not interesting here because they all represent frequencies greater than s b. Therefore, if we make sure that (s b) > b, these other terms will not be a problem. Let us, then, rewrite Equation (3.3), including only the first term and the expanded second term: v (t ) = E sin / T Eb sin bt + b sin( s + b )t T E b sin / T sin( s b )t (3.9)

An example will further clarify the problem.

EXAMPLE 3.1

Y
A digital communication system uses sampling at 10 kilosamples per second (kSa/s). The receiver filters out all frequencies above 5 kHz. What frequencies appear at the receiver for each of the following signal frequencies at the input to the transmitter? (a) 1 kHz (b) 5 kHz (c) 6 kHz

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89

SOLUTION
(a) The first term in Equation (3.9) is simply the input frequency, which is, of course, the only one we want to see in the output. The second term is the sum of the input and the sampling frequencies, and the third is the difference. In this case, the frequencies generated are: b = 1 kHz s + b = 11 kHz s b = 9 kHz

However, only the 1-kHz component passes through the filter and the system operates correctly. (b) b = 5 kHz s + b = 15 kHz s b = 5 kHz

Again, the system works properly and the 15-kHz component is removed by the filter, and only the input frequency of 5 kHz appears at the output. (c) b = 6 kHz s + b = 16 kHz s b = 4 kHz

Here we have a serious problem. The 16-kHz component is removed by the filter but the 4-kHz component is not. With 6 kHz at the input we produce 6 kHz and 4 kHz at the output.

X
Natural and Flat-Topped Sampling
The equations in the previous section assumed that a sample consisted of the baseband signal multiplied by a rectangular pulse. To simplify the mathematics, we assumed that the pulse had an amplitude of 1 V. These assumptions yield a sample pulse whose shape follows that of the original signal, as shown in Figure 3.3(a). This technique is called natural sampling.

FIGURE 3.3

Natural and flat-topped sampling

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Practical systems generally sample by using a sample-and-hold circuit, which maintains the signal level at the start of the sample pulse. The results of such a method are shown in Figure 3.3(b). This technique is known as flat-topped sampling. If the samples were to be transmitted directly as analog pulses of different amplitudes, there would be some small difference in frequency response between the two techniques. However, for digital transmission there is no practical difference between the two sampling methods.

Analog Pulse Modulation

As previously mentioned, it would be possible to transmit the samples directly as analog pulses. This technique, called pulse-amplitude modulation (PAM), does not offer any great advantage over conventional analog transmission. In current systems, PAM is used as an intermediate step; before being transmitted, the PAM signal is digitized. Similarly, at the receiver, the digital signal is converted back to PAM as part of the demodulation process. The original signal can then be recovered using a low-pass filter. Some improvement in noise performance can be made by transmitting pulses of equal amplitude but variable length (with the duration of the pulses corresponding to the amplitude of the samples). This technique is called pulse-duration modulation (PDM) or pulse-width modulation (PWM). PDM has uses in communication, in some telemetry systems for instance; but it is not likely to be seen in modern wireless systems. Similarly, it is possible to transmit the information signal by using pulses of equal amplitude and duration but changing their timing in accordance with the sample amplitude. This system, called pulse-position modulation (PPM), is mentioned only for completeness, as it is rarely seen. Figure 3.4 shows the basic nature of all these systems.

'

3.3

Pulse-Code Modulation
Pulse-code modulation (PCM) is the most commonly used digital modulation scheme. In PCM the available range of signal voltages is divided into levels, and each is assigned a binary number. Each sample is then represented by the binary number representing the level closest to its amplitude, and this number is transmitted in serial form. In linear PCM, levels are separated by equal voltage gradations. The number of levels available depends on the number of bits used to express the sample value. The number of levels is given by N = 2m (3.10)

Quantization and Quantizing Noise

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91

FIGURE 3.4

Analog pulse modulation

where N = number of levels m = number of bits per sample

EXAMPLE 3.2
Calculate the number of levels if the number of bits per sample is: (a) 8 (as used in telephony) (b) 16 (as used in the compact disc audio system)

SOLUTION
(a) The number of levels with 8 bits per sample is, from Equation (3.10), N = 2m = 28 = 256

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(b) The number of levels with 16 bits per sample is, from the same equation, N = 2m = 216 = 65536

X
This process is called quantizing . Since the original analog signal can have an infinite number of signal levels, the quantizing process will produce errors called quantizing errors or often quantizing noise. Figure 3.5 shows how quantizing errors arise. The largest possible error is one-half the difference between levels. Thus the error is proportionately greater for small signals. This means that the signal-to-noise ratio varies with the signal level and is greatest for large signals. The level of quantizing noise can be decreased by increasing the number of levels, which also increases the number of bits that must be used per sample. The dynamic range of a system is the ratio between the strongest possible signal that can be transmitted and the weakest discernible signal. For a linear PCM system, the maximum dynamic range in decibels is given approximately by DR = 1.76 + 6.02 m dB where DR = dynamic range in decibels m = number of bits per sample This equation ignores any noise contributed by the analog portion of the system. (3.11)

FIGURE 3.5

Quantizing error

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93

EXAMPLE 3.3

Y
Find the maximum dynamic range for a linear PCM system using 16-bit quantizing.

SOLUTION
From Equation (3.11) DR = 1.76 + 6.02m Db = 1.76 + 6.02 16 = 98.08 dB

Bit Rate

Increasing the number of bits per sample increases the bit rate, which is given very approximately by D = sm where D = data rate in bits per second s = sample rate in samples per second m = number of bits per sample Extra bits are often included to detect and correct errors. A few bits, called framing bits , are also needed to ensure that the transmitter and receiver agree on which bits constitute one sample. The actual bit rate will therefore be somewhat higher than calculated above. (3.12)

EXAMPLE 3.4

Y
Calculate the minimum data rate needed to transmit audio with a sampling rate of 40 kHz and 14 bits per sample.

SOLUTION
From Equation (3.12) D = = = = sm 40 103 14 560 103 b/s 560 kb/s

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Companding

The transmission bandwidth varies directly with the bit rate. In order to keep the bit rate and thus the required bandwidth low, companding is often used. This system involves using a compressor amplifier at the transmitter, with greater gain for low-level than for high-level signals. The compressor will reduce the quantizing error for small signals. The effect of compression on the signal can be reversed by using an expander at the receiver, with a gain characteristic that is the inverse of that at the transmitter. It is necessary to follow the same standards at both ends of the circuit so that the dynamics of the output signal are the same as at the input. The system used in the North American telephone system uses a characteristic known as the (mu) law, which has the following equation for the compressor: vo = where vo Vo Vi vi Vo ln(1 + v i /Vi ) ln(1 + ) = = = = = actual output voltage from the compressor maximum output voltage the maximum input voltage the actual input voltage a parameter that defines the amount of compression (contemporary systems use = 255) (3.13)

European telephone systems use a similar but not identical scheme called A-law compression. Figure 3.6 on page 95 shows the -255 curve. The curve is a transfer function for the compressor, relating input and output levels. It has been normalized, that is, vi/Vi and vo/Vo are plotted, rather than vi and vo.

EXAMPLE 3.5

Y
A signal at the input to a mu-law compressor is positive, with its voltage one-half the maximum input voltage. What proportion of the maximum output voltage is produced?

SOLUTION
From Equation (3.13) vo = = Vo ln(1 + v i /Vi ) ln(1 + ) . ) Vo ln(1 + 255 05 ln(1 + 255)

. = 0876 Vo

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95

This problem can also be solved graphically, using Figure 3.6.

X
FIGURE 3.6 Mu-Law compression

Digital companding is also possible. The method is to quantize a signal using a greater number of bits than will be transmitted, and then perform arithmetic on the samples to reduce the number of bits. This is the way companding is done in most modern telephone equipment. This type of companding is part of the coding and decoding process, which is the topic of the next section.

Coding and Decoding

The process of converting an analog signal into a PCM signal is called coding , and the inverse operation, converting back from digital to analog, is known as decoding. Both procedures are often accomplished in a single integrated-circuit device called a codec. Figure 3.7 is a block diagram showing the steps for converting an analog signal into a PCM code. The first block is a low-pass filter, required to prevent aliasing. As shown in section 3.2, the filter must block all frequency components above one-half the sampling rate. This requires a high-order filter.

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FIGURE 3.7

PCM coding

The next step is to sample the incoming waveform using a sampleand-hold circuit. There are many such circuits; a simple one is shown in Figure 3.8. The field-effect transistor Q turns on during the sample time, allowing the capacitor to charge to the amplitude of the incoming signal. The transistor then turns off, and the capacitor stores the signal value until the analog-to-digital converter has had time to convert the sample to digital form. The two operational amplifiers, connected as voltage followers, isolate the circuit from the other stages. The low output impedance of the first stage ensures that the capacitor quickly charges or discharges to the value of the incoming signal when the transistor conducts. The samples must now be coded as binary numbers. If we are using linear PCM, all that is required is a standard analog to digital (A/D) converter. Compression, if required, can be applied to the analog signal, but it is more common to incorporate the compression into the coding process. The codecs used in telephony generally accomplish compression by using a piecewise-linear approximation to the mu-law curve shown earlier in Figure 3.6. The positive- and negative-going parts of the curve are each divided into seven segments, with an additional segment centered around zero, resulting in a total of fifteen segments. Figure 3.9 shows the segmented curve. Segments 0 and 1 have the same slope and do not compress the segment. For each higher-numbered segment, the step size is double that of the previous segment. Each segment has sixteen steps. The result is a close approximation to the actual curve. The binary number produced by the codec in a telephone system has eight bits. The first is a sign bit, which is a one for a positive voltage and a zero for negative. Bits 2, 3, and 4 represent the segment number, from zero to seven. The last four bits determine the step within the segment. If we normalize the signal, that is, set the maximum input level equal to one volt, the
FIGURE 3.8 Sample-andhold circuit

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97

FIGURE 3.9 Segmented mu-law curve

step sizes can easily be calculated as follows: let the step size for the 0 and 1 segments be x mV. Then segment 2 has a step size of 2x, segment 3 a step size of 3x, and so on. Since each segment has 16 steps, the value of x can be found as follows. 16( x + x + 2 x + 4 x + 8 x + 16 x + 32 x + 64 x ) = 1000 mV x = 0.488 mV The relationship between input voltage and segment is shown in Table 3.1.
TABLE 3.1
Segment 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Mu-Law Compressed PCM Coding


Voltage Range (mV) 07.8 7.815.6 15.631.25 31.2562.5 62.5125 125250 250500 5001000 Step Size (mV) 0.488 0.488 0.9772 1.953 3.906 7.813 15.625 31.25

EXAMPLE 3.6

Y
Code a positive-going signal with amplitude 30% of the maximum allowed as a PCM sample.

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SOLUTION
The signal is positive, so the first bit is a one. On the normalized voltage scale, the amplitude is 300 mV. A glance at Table 3.1 shows that the signal is in segment 6. That means the next three bits are 110 (6 in binary). This segment starts at 250 mV and increases 15.625 mV per step. The signal voltage is 50 mV above the lower limit, which translates into 50/15.625 = 3.2 steps. This is less than halfway from step 3 to step 4, so it will be quantized as step 3, making the last four bits 0011 (3 in binary). Therefore the code representing this sample is 11100011.

X
In operation, many modern codecs achieve compression by first encoding the signal using a 12-bit linear PCM code, then converting the 12-bit linear code into an 8-bit compressed code by discarding some of the bits. This is a simple example of digital signal processing (DSP). Once an analog signal has been digitized, it can be manipulated in a great many ways simply by performing arithmetic with the bits that make up each sample. In the case of the 12-to-8 bit conversion described here, some precision will be lost for large-amplitude samples, but the data rate needed to transmit the information will be much less than for 12-bit PCM. Since most of the samples in an audio signal have amplitudes much less than the maximum, there is a gain in accuracy compared with 8-bit linear PCM. Briefly, the conversion works as follows. The 12-bit PCM sample begins with a sign bit, which is retained. The other eleven bits describe the amplitude of the sample, with the most significant bit first. For low-level samples, the last few bits and the sign bit may be the only non-zero bits. The segment number for the 8-bit code can be determined by subtracting the number of leading zeros (not counting the sign bit) in the 12-bit code from 7. The next four bits after the first 1 are counted as the level number within the segment. Any remaining bits are discarded.

EXAMPLE 3.7

Y
Convert the 12-bit sample 100110100100 into an 8-bit compressed code.

SOLUTION
Copy the sign bit to the 8-bit code. Next count the leading zeros (2) and subtract from 7 to get 5 (101 in binary). The first four bits of the 8-bit code are thus 1101. Now copy the next four bits after the first 1 (not counting the sign

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bit) to the 8-bit code. Thus the next four bits are 1010. Discard the rest. The corresponding 8-bit code is 11011010.

X
The decoding process is the reverse of coding. It is illustrated in the block diagram in Figure 3.10. The expansion process follows an algorithm analogous to that used in the compressor. The low-pass filter at the output removes the high-frequency components in the PAM signal that exits from the digital-to-analog converter.

FIGURE 3.10

PCM decoding

Differential PCM

Instead of coding the entire sample amplitude for each sample, it is possible to code and transmit only the difference between the amplitude of the current sample and that of the previous sample. Since successive samples often have similar amplitudes, it should be possible to use fewer bits to encode the changes. The most common (and most extreme) example of this process is delta modulation, which is discussed in the next section.

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3.4

Delta Modulation
In delta modulation, only one bit is transmitted per sample. That bit is a one if the current sample is more positive than the previous sample, zero if the current sample is more negative. Since only a small amount of information about each sample is transmitted, delta modulation requires a much higher sampling rate than PCM for equal quality of reproduction. Nyquist did not say that transmitting samples at twice the maximum signal frequency would always give undistorted results, only that it could, provided the samples were transmitted accurately. Figure 3.11 shows how delta modulation generates errors. In region (i), the signal is not varying at all; the transmitter can only send ones and zeros, however, so the output waveform has a triangular shape, producing a noise signal called granular noise. On the other hand, the signal in region (iii) changes more rapidly than the system can follow, creating an error in the output called slope overload.

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FIGURE 3.11

Delta modulation

Adaptive Delta Modulation

Adaptive delta modulation, in which the step size varies according to previous values, is more efficient. Figure 3.12 shows how it works. After a number of steps in the same direction, the step size increases. A well-designed adaptive delta modulation scheme can transmit voice at about half the bit rate of a PCM system, with equivalent quality.

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3.5

Data Compression
In the previous section we looked at companding, which we noticed consisted of compression at the transmitter and expansion at the receiver. Essentially this is an analog technique for improving dynamic range by increasing the signal-to-noise ratio for low-level signals although, as we

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FIGURE 3.12

Adaptive delta modulation

saw, it can be implemented using digital signal processing. We now turn our attention to the bits that result from the analog-to-digital conversion just discussed and consider whether there is any way to reduce the number of bits that have to be transmitted per second. This reduction is also called compression, but it is really a completely different process from the one just described. We shall call it data compression to emphasize the difference. Generally, without data compression more bandwidth is required to transmit an analog signal in digital form. For instance, analog telephony requires less than 4 kHz per channel with single-sideband AM transmission. Digital telephony conventionally operates at 64 kb/s. The exact bandwidth requirement for this depends on the modulation scheme but is likely to be much more than 4 kHz unless the channel has a very high signal-to-noise radio and an elaborate modulation scheme is used. In order to use digital

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techniques in wireless communication, it is very desirable to reduce the bandwidth to no more, and preferably less, than that needed for analog transmission.

Lossy and Lossless Compression

There are two main categories of data compression. Lossless compression involves transmitting all of the data in the original signal but using fewer bits. Lossy compression, on the other hand, allows for some reduction in the quality of the transmitted signal. Obviously there has to be some limit on the loss in quality, depending on the application. For instance, up until now the expectation of voice quality has been less for a mobile telephone than for a wireline telephone. This expectation is now changing as wireless telephones become more common. People are no longer impressed with the fact that wireless telephony works at all; they want it to work as well as a fixed telephone. Lossless compression schemes generally look for redundancies in the data. For instance, a string of zeros can be replaced with a code that tells the receiver the length of the string. This technique is called run-length encoding. It is very useful in some applications: facsimile (fax) transmission, for instance, where it is unnecessary to transmit as much data for white space on the paper as for the message. In voice transmission it is possible to greatly reduce the bit rate, or even stop transmitting altogether, during time periods in which there is no speech. For example, during a typical conversation each person generally talks for less than half the time. Taking advantage of this to increase the bandwidth for transmission in real time requires there to be more than one signal multiplexed. When the technique is applied to a radio system, it also allows battery-powered transmitters to conserve power by shutting off or reducing power during pauses in speech. Lossy compression can involve reducing the number of bits per sample or reducing the sampling rate. As we have seen, the first reduces the signal-to-noise ratio and the second limits the high-frequency response of the signal, so there are limits to both methods. Other lossy compression methods rely on knowledge of the type of signal, and often, on knowledge of human perception. This means that voice, music, and video signals would have to be treated differently. These more advanced methods often involve the need for quite extensive digital signal processing. Because of this, they have only recently become practical for real-time use with portable equipment. A couple of brief examples will show the sort of thing that is possible. A vocoder (voice coder) is an example of lossy compression applied to human speech. A typical vocoder tries to reduce the amount of data that needs to be transmitted by constructing a model for the human vocal system. Human sounds are produced by emitting air from the lungs at an adjustable rate. For

Vocoders

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voiced sounds this air causes the vocal cords to vibrate at an adjustable frequency; for unvoiced sounds the air passes the vocal cords without vibrating them. In either case, the sound passes through the larynx and mouth, which act as filters, changing the frequency response of the system at frequent intervals. Typically there are from three to six resonant peaks in the frequency response of the vocal tract. Vocoders can imitate the human voice with an electronic system. Modern vocoders start with the vocal-tract model above. There is an excitation function, followed by a multi-pole bandpass filter. Parameters for the excitation and the filter response must be transmitted at intervals of about 20 ms, depending on the system. Vocoders of this type are known as linear predictive coders because of the mathematical process used to generate the filter parameters from an analysis of the voice signal. The first step in transmitting a signal using a vocoder is to digitize it in the usual way, using PCM, generally at 64 kb/s. Then the signal is analyzed and the necessary excitation and filter parameters extracted. Only these parameters need to be sent to the receiver where the signal is reconstructed. The transmitted data rate is typically in the range of about 2.4 to 9.6 kb/s, allowing a much smaller transmission bandwidth than would be required for the original 64 kb/s rate. There are two main ways of generating the excitation signal in a linear predictive vocoder. In pulse excited linear predictive ( PELP or sometimes RPELP, for regular pulse excited linear predictive) vocoders, a white noise generator is used for unvoiced sounds, and a variable-frequency pulse generator produces the voiced sounds. The pulse generator creates a tone rich in harmonics, as is the sound produced by human vocal cords. Both sources have variable amplitudes. Figure 3.13 illustrates the process at the receiver. Residual excited linear predictive ( RELP ) vocoders, on the other hand, apply the inverse of the filter that will be used at the receiver to the voice signal. The output of this filter is a signal that, when applied to the receiver filter, will reproduce the original signal exactly. Figure 3.14 shows how this

FIGURE 3.13

PELP vocoder

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FIGURE 3.14

Generation of excitation signal using codebook

process works at the transmitter. The residual signal is too complex to transmit exactly with the available bit rate, so it must be represented in a more economical way. One method is to compare it with values in a table, called a codebook , and transmit the number of the closest codebook entry. The receiver looks up the codebook entry, generates the corresponding signal, and uses it instead of the pulse and noise generators shown in Figure 3.13. Many other vocoder variations are possible as well. Reasonable quality can be achieved with vocoders using data rates much lower than those required for PCM. So far, the quality is not quite as good as for straightforward PCM, however. It should be obvious that vocoders are intended for use with voice only; whereas, the PCM system described above can be used to send any 64 kb/s data stream, including music, fax, or computer files. None of these will work properly with a vocoder. Vocoders even tend to give a somewhat unnatural quality to human speech. Still, the gain in bit rate and hence bandwidth, compared to PCM, is so great that vocoders are very common in digital wireless voice communication.

'

Summary

The main points to remember from this chapter are:


(

Modern communication systems are often a mixture of analog and digital sources and transmission techniques. The trend is toward digital systems. Modern digital systems have better performance and use less bandwidth than equivalent analog systems. An analog signal that is to be transmitted digitally must be sampled at least twice per cycle of its highest-frequency component. Failure to do so creates undesirable aliasing. PCM requires that the amplitude of each sample of a signal be converted to a binary number. The more bits used for the number, the greater the accuracy, but the greater the bit rate required. Delta modulation transmits only one bit per sample, indicating whether the signal level is increasing or decreasing, but it needs a higher sampling rate than PCM for equivalent results.

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The signal-to-noise ratio for either PCM or delta modulation signals can often be improved by using companding. Lossless compression eliminates redundant data bits, thereby reducing the bit rate with no effect on signal quality. Lossy compression compromises signal quality in order to reduce the bit rate. For voice transmissions, vocoders are often used to achieve great reductions in bit rate.

( Equation List
fa = fs fb v (t ) = Eb E sin / T sin bt + b sin( s + b )t T N = 2m DR = 1.76 + 6.02m dB D = sm vo = Vo ln(1 + v i /Vi ) ln(1 + ) E b sin / T sin( s b )t (3.10) (3.11) (3.12) (3.13) (3.8)

(3.9)

( Key Terms
aliasing distortion created by using too low a sampling rate when coding an analog signal for digital transmission codec device that converts sampled analog signal to and from its PCM or delta modulation equivalent coding conversion of a sampled analog signal into a PCM or delta modulation bitstream companding combination of compression at the transmitter and expansion at the receiver of a communication system

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decoding conversion of a PCM or delta modulation bitstream to analog samples delta modulation a coding scheme that records the change in signal level since the previous sample digital signal processing (DSP) filtering of signals by converting them to digital form, performing arithmetic operations on the data bits, then converting back to analog form flat-topped sampling sampling of an analog signal using a sample-andhold circuit, such that the sample has the same amplitude for its whole duration foldover distortion see aliasing framing bits bits added to a digital signal to help the receiver to detect the beginning and end of data frames natural sampling sampling of an analog signal so that the sample amplitude follows that of the original signal for the duration of the sample pulse-amplitude modulation (PAM) a series of pulses in which the amplitude of each pulse represents the amplitude of the information signal at a given time pulse-code modulation (PCM) a series of pulses in which the amplitude of the information signal at a given time is coded as a binary number pulse-duration modulation (PDM) a series of pulses in which the duration of each pulse represents the amplitude of the information signal at a given time pulse-position modulation (PPM) a series of pulses in which the timing of each pulse represents the amplitude of the information signal at a given time pulse-width modulation (PWM) see pulse-duration modulation (PDM) quantizing representation of a continuously varying quantity as one of a number of discrete values quantizing errors inaccuracies caused by the representation of a continuously varying quantity as one of a number of discrete values quantizing noise see quantizing errors run-length encoding method of data compression by encoding the length of a string of ones or zeros instead of transmitting all the one or zero bits individually

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slope overload in delta modulation, an error condition that occurs when the analog signal to be digitized varies too quickly for the system to follow vocoder circuit for digitizing voice at a low data rate by using knowledge of the way in which voice sounds are produced

( Questions
1. Give four advantages and one disadvantage of using digital (rather than analog) techniques for the transmission of voice signals. 2. Explain the necessity for sampling an analog signal before transmitting it digitally. 3. What is the Nyquist rate? What happens when a signal is sampled at less than the Nyquist rate? 4. Explain the difference between natural and flat-topped sampling. 5. (a) List three types of analog pulse modulation. (b) Which pulse modulation scheme is used as an intermediate step in the creation of PCM? (c) Which pulse modulation scheme also finds use in audio amplifiers and motor speed-control systems? 6. What is meant by the term quantizing noise? 7. For a PCM signal, describe the effects of: (a) increasing the sampling rate (b) increasing the number of bits per sample 8. (a) Briefly explain what is meant by companding. (b) What advantage does companded PCM have over linear PCM for voice communication? 9. How does differential PCM differ from standard PCM? 10. Explain why the sampling rate must be greater for delta modulation than for PCM. 11. What is meant by slope overload in a delta modulation system? How can this problem be reduced? 12. What are the two functions of a codec? Where in a telephone system is it usually located? 13. Explain briefly how -law compression is implemented in a typical codec.

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14. Explain the difference between lossless and lossy data compression. Give an example of each. 15. How do vocoders model the human vocal cords? How do they model the mouth and larynx? 16. What gives vocoders their somewhat artificial voice quality? 17. Does digital audio always have higher quality than analog audio? Explain.

( Problems
1. It is necessary to transmit the human voice using a frequency range from 300 Hz to 3.5 kHz using a digital system. (a) What is the minimum required sampling rate, according to theory? (b) Why would a practical system need a higher rate than the one you calculated in part (a)? 2. The human voice actually has a spectrum that extends to much higher frequencies than are necessary for communication. Suppose a frequency of 5 kHz was present in a sampler that sampled at 8 kHz. (a) What would happen? (b) How can the problem described in part (a) be prevented? 3. A 1-kHz sine wave with a peak value of 1 volt and no dc offset is sampled every 250 microseconds. Assume the first sample is taken as the voltage crosses zero in the upward direction. Sketch the results over 1 ms using: (a) PAM with all pulses in the positive direction (b) PDM (c) PPM 4. The compact disc system of digital audio uses two channels with TDM. Each channel is sampled at 44.1 kHz and coded using linear PCM with sixteen bits per sample. Find: (a) the maximum audio frequency that can be recorded (assuming ideal filters) (b) the maximum dynamic range in decibels (c) the bit rate, ignoring error correction and framing bits (d) the number of quantizing levels 5. Suppose an input signal to a -law compressor has a positive voltage and an amplitude 25% of the maximum possible. Calculate the output voltage as a percentage of the maximum output.

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6. Suppose a composite video signal with a baseband frequency range from dc to 4 MHz is transmitted by linear PCM, using eight bits per sample and a sampling rate of 10 MHz. (a) How many quantization levels are there? (b) Calculate the bit rate, ignoring overhead. (c) What would be the maximum signal-to-noise ratio, in decibels? (d) What type of noise determines the answer to part (c)? 7. How would a signal with 50% of the maximum input voltage be coded in 8-bit PCM, using digital compression? 8. Convert a sample coded (using mu-law compression) as 11001100 to a voltage with the maximum sample voltage normalized as 1 V. 9. Convert the 12-bit PCM sample 110011001100 to an 8-bit compressed sample. 10. A typical PCS system using a vocoder operates at 9600 b/s. By what factor has the amount of data required been reduced, compared with standard digital telephony?

Digital Modulation

Objectives
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
( (

Describe the basic types of digital modulation. Calculate the maximum data rate for a channel with a given modulation scheme and signal-to-noise ratio. Explain the use of eye diagrams and constellation diagrams. Explain the difference between bit rate and baud rate and calculate both for typical digital modulation systems. Describe and compare FSK, PSK, and QAM and perform simple calculations with each. Explain the concepts of multiplexing and multiple access using frequency and time division. Describe the principles of spread-spectrum communication and distinguish between frequency-hopping and direct-sequence systems. Calculate spreading gain and signal-to-noise ratio for spread-spectrum systems. Describe code-division multiple access and compare with FDMA and TDMA.

( (

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4.1

Introduction
Digital signals have become very important in wireless communication. Some of the information to be transmitted is already in digital form. In Chapter 3, we examined the ways in which analog signals such as voice can be converted to digital form for transmission. In order to send data by radio, it is necessary to use a higher frequency carrier wave, just as for analog communication. Since the high-frequency carrier is a sine wave for digital as well as analog signals, the same three basic parameters are available for modulation: amplitude, frequency, and phase. All three, singly and in combination, are used in digital systems. Often the modulator and demodulator are collectively described as a modem. You are probably familiar with telephone modems. These modulate digital data onto an audio-frequency carrier. Radio-frequency modems are similar in principle though quite a bit different in construction due to the much higher carrier frequencies used. In a holdover from the days of Morse code (a digital, though not a binary, communication scheme), the word keying is still often used to denote digital modulation schemes. Thus we have frequency-shift keying (FSK) and phase-shift keying (PSK) . Straightforward amplitude-shift keying (ASK) is rare in digital communication unless we count Morse code, but quadrature AM (QAM) is very common. In this chapter we shall look at all of these schemes as they are used in wireless transmission. In Chapter 1 we noted that information capacity is proportional to bandwidth. This fundamental relationship is given by Hartleys law, which is repeated here for convenience: I = ktB where I = amount of information to be transmitted in bits k = a constant that depends on the modulation scheme and the signal-to-noise ratio t = time in seconds B = bandwidth in hertz We noted in Chapter 1 that the constant k is important. In Chapter 2, when we studied analog signals, we saw that the bandwidth required for the same information rate varied greatly with the modulation scheme. In that chapter we used baseband bandwidth as a rough measure of information content. We are now in a position to discuss the value of k for different digital modulation schemes. The information rate for digital communication will be expressed in bits per second. (4.1)

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Digital signals result in discrete, rather than continuous, changes in the modulated signal. The receiver examines the signal at specified times, and the state of the signal at each such time is called a symbol. The eventual output will be binary, but it is certainly possible to use more than two states for the transmitted symbol. Complex schemes using several levels can send more data in a given bandwidth. There is a theoretical limit to the maximum data rate that can be transmitted in a channel with a given bandwidth. The Shannon-Hartley theorem states: C = 2 B log 2 M where C = information capacity in bits per second B = channel bandwidth in hertz M = number of possible states per symbol For instance, if an FSK modulator can transmit either of two frequencies, M = 2. A more elaborate modulator, using four different phase angles, each of which can have two different amplitudes, has M = 4 2 = 8. The limiting effect of bandwidth on data rate is understood most easily by looking at a low-pass, rather than a bandpass, channel. Suppose that the channel can pass all frequencies from zero to some maximum frequency B. Then, of course, the highest frequency that can be transmitted is B. Suppose that a simple binary signal consisting of alternate ones and zeros is transmitted through the channel. This time let a logic 1 be 1 V and a logic 0 be 1 V. The input signal will look like Figure 4.1(a): it will be a square wave with a frequency one-half the bit rate (since there are two bits, a one and a zero, for each cycle). This signal, which is a square wave, has harmonics at all odd (4.2)

FIGURE 4.1

Digital transmission through a low-pass channel

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multiples of its fundamental frequency, with declining amplitude as the frequency increases. This was shown in Chapter 1, using Fourier analysis. At very low bit rates the output signal after passage through the channel will be similar to the input, but as the bit rate increases, the frequency of the square wave also increases and more of its harmonics are filtered out. Therefore, the output will become more and more distorted. Finally, for a bit rate of 2B the frequency of the input signal will be B, and only the fundamental of the square wave will pass through the channel, as shown in Figure 4.1(b). The receiver will still be able to distinguish a one from a zero, and the information will be transmitted. Thus, with binary information, the channel capacity will be 2B, as predicted by Equation (4.2). Often the ratio of bit rate to channel bandwidth, expressed in bits per second per hertz, is used as a figure of merit in digital radio systems. In the preceding paragraph, we can see that for a two-level code the theoretical maximum bandwidth efficiency is 2 b/s/Hz. If a random pattern of ones and zeros were transmitted using the code of Figure 4.1 and the signal were applied to an oscilloscope sweeping at the bit rate, we would see the patterns shown in Figure 4.2. These are called eye diagrams. The reason should be obvious from Figure 4.2(b). Because some sweeps of the scope take place during a high- and some during a low-signal level, both levels appear on the scope. A diagram like that in Figure 4.2(a) indicates a data rate much lower than can be carried by the channel. Figure 4.2(b) indicates an optimal system. If an attempt were made to transmit data too quickly, the eye would begin to close due to intersymbol interference, as shown in Figure 4.2(c). Now suppose that four voltage levels, each corresponding to a two-bit sequence, are used, as in Figure 4.3. The bandwidth required for the fundamental of this signal is the same as before. We have, it seems, managed to transmit twice as much information in the same bandwidth. Again, this agrees with Equation (4.2). Unfortunately, the information capacity of a channel cannot be increased without limit by increasing the number of states because noise makes it difficult to distinguish between signal states. The ultimate limit is called the Shannon limit: C = B log 2 (1 + S/N ) where C = information capacity in bits per second B = bandwidth in hertz S/N = signal-to-noise ratio (as a power ratio, not in decibels) (4.3)

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FIGURE 4.2

Eye diagrams

FIGURE 4.3 Four-level code

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By the way, it is quite easy to find logs to the base 2, even if your calculator lacks this function. Simply find the log to the base 10 (the common log) of the given number and divide by the log of 2, that is: log 2 N = log 10 N log 10 2 (4.4)

The effect of noise on a signal can be seen in the eye diagram of Figure 4.4. The noise causes successive oscilloscope traces to be at different amplitudes. If the noise is severe enough, the eye closes and data recovery is unreliable.
FIGURE 4.4 Eye diagram showing inter-symbol interference and noise

EXAMPLE 4.1

Y
A radio channel has a bandwith of 10 kHz and a signal-to-noise ratio of 15 dB. What is the maximum data rate than can be transmitted: (a) Using any system? (b) Using a code with four possible states?

SOLUTION
(a) We can find the theoretical maximum data rate for this channel from Equation (4.3). First, though, we need the signal-to-noise ratio as a power ratio. We can convert the given decibel value as follows: S 15 = log 1 10 N . = 316

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Now we can use Equation (4.3): C = = = = B log2(1 + S/N) 10 103 log2(1 + 31.6) 10 103 5.03 50.3 kb/s

(b) We can use Equation (4.2) to find the maximum possible bit rate given the specified code and bandwidth. We will then have to compare this answer with that of part (a). From Equation (4.2), C = = = = 2B log2 M 2 10 103 log24 2 10 103 2 40 kb/s

Since this is less than the maximum possible for this channel, it should be possible to transmit over this channel, with a four-level scheme, at 40 kb/s. A more elaborate modulation scheme would be required to attain the maximum data rate of 50.3 kb/s for the channel.

X
At this point we should distinguish between bit rate and baud rate. The bit rate is simply the number of bits transmitted per second (C in the preceding two equations), while the baud rate is the number of symbols per second. Therefore, if we let the baud rate be S (for symbols, since B is already being used for bandwidth), then: C = S log 2 M where C = capacity in bits per second S = baud rate in symbols per second M = number of possible states per symbol (4.5)

EXAMPLE 4.2

Y
A modulator transmits symbols, each of which has 64 different possible states, 10,000 times per second. Calculate the baud rate and bit rate.

SOLUTION
The baud rate is simply the symbol rate, or 10 kbaud. The bit rate is given by Equation (4.5):

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C = S log2 M = 10 103 log264 = 60 kb/s

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4.2

Frequency-Shift Keying
Probably the simplest digital modulation scheme in current use is frequency-shift keying (FSK). In its simplest form two frequencies are transmitted, one corresponding to binary one, the other to zero. In digital communication systems, a one is often denoted by the term mark , and a zero is called a space . This is another holdover from telegraphy in which Morse code messages were often recorded as marks on a paper tape. FSK is a robust scheme; that is, like analog FM, it tends to be reliable in the presence of noise. Its disadvantage is: since each symbol has only two possible states, it is not very efficient in terms of bandwidth. It tends to be used for low-data-rate applications, such as pagers, and for transmitting bursts of data over systems that are mainly analog. FSK is also used extensively in high-frequency radio systems for radioteletype transmission. High-frequency radio channels tend to be very noisy, and phase shifts induced into the signal by travel through the ionosphere make the use of any scheme requiring accurate phase information impractical. Data rates for HF communication are very low (on the order of 100 b/s) and frequency shifts between mark and space vary from 170 Hz to 850 Hz. Usually HF FSK is actually transmitted and received using SSBSC AM equipment. Two different audio tones, one for mark and one for space, with the required frequency difference are chosen. These are applied one at a time to the microphone input of the transmitter. This results in the transmission of RF frequencies that differ by the same amount as the audio frequencies. At the receiver two audio tones differing by the required frequency shift will be produced. Figure 4.5 shows the spectrum of a typical HF FSK transmission, as well as a typical pair of audio tones used to modulate the transmitter. A variant of FSK is AFSK (audio frequency-shift keying), in which two different audio frequencies, corresponding to mark and space, are used to modulate a carrier by any of the analog methods discussed in Chapter 2. AFSK is often combined with FM modulation for the audio tones. Figure 4.6 shows how this can work using a VHF amateur radio link as an example. There is an extensive amateur packet-radio network, using AFSK transmission with a frequency shift of 1 kHz between mark and space, operating at a data rate of 1200 bits per second.

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FIGURE 4.5

Spectrum of HF FSK transmission

FIGURE 4.6

AFSK using FM equipment

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It is possible to build an FSK system with more than two different frequencies in order to increase the number of bits per symbol, but it is usually more efficient to move to a system using phase shifts, or a combination of amplitude and phase shifts, when this is required.

Gaussian Minimum-Shift Keying

A special case of FSK called Gaussian minimum-shift keying (GMSK) is used in the GSM cellular radio and PCS systems to be described later. In a minimum-shift system, the mark and space frequencies are separated by half the bit rate, that is: m s = 0.5 b where m = frequency transmitted for mark (binary 1) s = frequency transmitted for space (binary 0) b = bit rate If we use the conventional FM terminology from Chapter 2, we see that GMSK has a deviation each way from the center (carrier) frequency, of = 0.25 b which corresponds to a modulation index of m = = m 0.25 b b (4.6)

= 0.25 The word Gaussian refers to the shape of a filter that is used before the modulator to reduce the transmitted bandwidth of the signal. GMSK uses less bandwidth than conventional FSK, because the filter causes the transmitted frequency to move gradually between the mark and space frequencies. With conventional FSK the frequency transition is theoretically instantaneous, and in practice as rapid as the hardware allows, producing sidebands far from the carrier frequency.

EXAMPLE 4.3

Y
The GSM cellular radio system uses GMSK in a 200-kHz channel, with a channel data rate of 270.833 kb/s. Calculate: (a) the frequency shift between mark and space

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(b) the transmitted frequencies if the carrier (center) frequency is exactly 880 MHz (c) the bandwidth efficiency of the scheme in b/s/Hz

SOLUTION
(a) The frequency shift is m s = 0.5 b = 0.5 270.833 kHz = 135.4165 kHz (b) The shift each way from the carrier frequency is half that found in (a) so the maximum frequency is max = c + 0.25 b = 880 MHz + 0.25 270.833 kHz = 880.0677 MHz and the minimum frequency is min = c 0.25 b = 880 MHz 0.25 270.833 kHz = 879.93229 MHz (c) The GSM system has a bandwidth efficiency of 270.833/200 = 1.35 b/s/Hz, comfortably under the theoretical maximum of 2 b/s/Hz for a two-level code.

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4.3

Phase-Shift Keying
When somewhat higher data rates are required in a band-limited channel than can be achieved with FSK, phase-shift keying ( PSK ) is often used. Measuring phase requires a reference phase, which would be hard to maintain accurately. Usually, the phase of each symbol is compared with that of the previous symbol, rather than with a constant reference. This type of PSK is more completely described as delta phase-shift keying (DPSK). Most DPSK modems use a four-phase system called quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK or DQPSK). In QPSK, each symbol represents two bits and the bit rate is twice the baud rate. This is called a dibit system. Such a system can carry twice as much data in the same bandwidth as can a single-bit system like FSK, provided the signal-to-noise ratio is high enough. Figure 4.7 is a vector diagram that represents a typical DQPSK system. Phase shifts are given with respect to the phase of the previous symbol. Each of the four possible phase shifts (including no shift at all) is associated with a two-bit sequence, as shown in Table 4.1.

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FIGURE 4.7 Delta quadrature phase-shift keying

TABLE 4.1

DQPSK Coding
Symbol 00 01 10 11

Phase Shift (degrees) 0 +90 90 180

/4 Delta Phase-Shift Keying

The system shown in Figure 4.7 and Table 4.1 requires a 180 degree transition for the symbol 11. The transmitted signal has to go to zero amplitude momentarily as it makes this transition. Accurate transmission of this signal therefore requires a linear amplifier, unlike the case for FSK. In fact, the amplifier should be linear all the way down to zero output. This is quite possible, of course, but linear amplifiers are markedly less efficient than nonlinear amplifiers. The need for linearity can be reduced, though not eliminated, by changing to a system called /4 DQPSK. Here the allowable transitions from the previous phase angle are 45 and 135. Neither of these requires the signal amplitude to go through zero, relaxing the linearity requirements somewhat. A typical /4 DQPSK system has the state table shown in Table 4.2, and a vector diagram showing the possible transitions TABLE 4.2 /4 DQPSK Coding
Symbol 00 01 10 11

Phase Shift (degrees) 45 135 45 135

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can be found in Figure 4.8. This system is used for the North American TDMA cell phone and PCS systems.
FIGURE 4.8 /4 DQPSK

EXAMPLE 4.4

Y
The North American TDMA digital cell phone standard transmits at 24.3 kilobaud using DQPSK. What is the channel data rate?

SOLUTION
Since this is a dibit system, the symbol rate, also known as the baud rate, is half the bit rate. Therefore the data rate is 48.6 kb/s.

'

4.4

Quadrature Amplitude Modulation


The only way to achieve high data rates with a narrowband channel is to increase the number of bits per symbol, and the most reliable way to do that is to use a combination of amplitude and phase modulation known as quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM). For a given system, there is a finite number of allowable amplitude-phase combinations. Figure 4.9(a) is a constellation diagram that shows the possibilities for a hypothetical system with sixteen amplitude/phase combinations. Thus each transmitted symbol represents four bits. This diagram is similar to the previous figure except that the vectors are not drawn. Each dot represents a possible amplitude/phase combination or state. With a noiseless channel, the number of combinations could be increased indefinitely, but a practical limit is reached when the difference between adjacent states becomes too small to be detected reliably in the presence of noise and distortion. If a QAM signal is applied to

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FIGURE 4.9

Quadrature AM

the oscilloscope, the noise can be seen as a blurring of the points in the constellation, as shown in Figure 4.9(b). In fixed terrestrial microwave systems QAM is used with quite a large number of statesup to 1024 in some cases. This requires a very high signal-to-noise ratio however, and portable and mobile systems are much more limited. QAM is more efficient in terms of bandwidth than either FSK or QPSK, but it is also more susceptible to noise. Another disadvantage compared to FSK is that QAM signals, like analog AM signals, vary in amplitude. This means that transmitter amplifiers must be linear.

EXAMPLE 4.5

Y
A modem uses 16 different phase angles and 4 different amplitudes. How many bits does it transmit for each symbol?

SOLUTION
The number of possible states per symbol is 16 4 = 64 The number of bits per symbol is log264 = 6

'

4.5

Multiplexing and Multiple Access


Multiplexing allows several signals to be carried on a single transmission channel or medium. When the signals to be multiplexed originate at different locations, the system is often described by using the term multiple access. Both are used in wireless communication.

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Frequency-Division Multiplexing and Multiple Access

The simplest multiple access scheme is the one used by radio and television broadcasting stations. Each signal is assigned a portion of the available frequency spectrum on a full-time basis. This is called frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) or frequency-division multiple access (FDMA) depending on the situation. For instance, over-the-air broadcasts are FDMA while a cable-television system, where all the signals are assigned slots on the same cable by the headend equipment, is an example of FDM. Frequency division can be and is used with both analog and digital signals.

Time-Division Multiplexing and Multiple Access

Time-division multiplexing (TDM) is used mainly for digital communication. In TDM, each information signal is allowed to use all the available bandwidth, but only for part of the time. From Hartleys Law (Equation 4.1), it can be seen that the amount of information transmitted is proportional to both bandwidth and time. Therefore, at least in theory, it is equally possible to divide the bandwidth or the time among the users of a channel. Continuously varying signals, such as analog audio, are not well adapted to TDM, because the signal is present at all times. On the other hand, sampled audio is very suitable for TDM, as it is possible to transmit one sample or bit from each of several sources sequentially, then send the next sample or bit from each source, and so on. As already mentioned, sampling itself does not imply digital transmission, but in practice sampling and digitizing usually go together. Many signals can be sent on one channel by sending either a sample from each signal, or a fixed number of bits from each signal, in rotation. Time-division multiplexing requires that the total bit rate be multiplied by the number of channels multiplexed. This means that the bandwidth requirement is also multiplied by the number of signals.

TDM in Telephony

TDM is used extensively in digital telephony. The simplest North American standard is known as the DS-1 signal, which consists of 24 PCM voice channels, multiplexed using TDM. Each channel is sampled at 8 kHz, with 8 bits per sample, as previously described. This gives a bit rate of 8 kb/s 8 = 64 kb/s for each voice channel. The DS-1 signal consists of frames, each of which contains the bits representing one sample from each of the 24 channels. One extra bit, called the framing bit, is added to each frame to help synchronize the transmitter and receiver. Each frame contains 24 8 + 1 = 193 bits. The samples must be transmitted at the same rate as they were obtained in order for the signal to be reconstructed at the receiver without delay. This requires the multiplexed signal to be sent at a rate of 8000 frames per second.

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Thus the bit rate is 193 8000 b/s = 1.544 Mb/s. See Figure 4.10 for an illustration of a frame of a DS-1 signal.
FIGURE 4.10 DS-1 signal

Time-Division Multiple Access

Time-division multiple access (TDMA) is like TDM except that it involves signals originating at different points. The telephone system observed in the previous section uses TDM because all the signals are combined at one point. An example of TDMA is a digital cellular radio system where several signals from mobile units are combined on one channel by assigning each a time slot. TDMA systems are very similar in principle to TDM, but they tend to be more complex to design. One complicating feature in TDMA radio systems is: the propagation time for the signal from a mobile unit to a base station varies with its distance to the base. We will look at the details later when we discuss specific systems.

'

4.6

Spread-Spectrum Systems
As radio communication systems proliferate and traffic increases, interference problems become more severe. Interference is nothing new, of course, but it has been managed reasonably successfully in the past by careful regulatory control of transmitter locations, frequencies, and power levels. There are some exceptions to this, however. Two examples are CB radio and cordless telephones. In fact, wherever government regulation of frequency use is informal or nonexistent, interference is likely to become a serious problem. Widespread use of such systems as cordless phones, wireless local-area networks, and wireless modems by millions of people obviously precludes the tight regulation associated with services such as broadcasting, making bothersome interference almost inevitable. One approach to the problem, used by cellular radio systems, is to employ a complex system of frequency reuse, with computers choosing the best channel at any given time. However, this system too implies strong central control, if not by government then by one or more service providers, each having exclusive rights to certain radio channels. That is, in fact, the current situation with respect to cellular telephony,

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but it can cause problems where several widely different services use the same frequency range. The 49-MHz band, for instance, is currently used by cordless phones, baby monitors, remote controlled models, and various other users in an almost completely unregulated way. Similarly, the 2.4-GHz band is shared by wireless LANs, wireless modems, cordless phonesand even microwave ovens! Another problem with channelized communication, even when tightly controlled, is that the number of channels is strictly limited. If all available channels are in use in a given cell of a cellular phone system, the next attempt to complete a call will be blocked, that is, the call will not go through. Service does not degrade gracefully as traffic increases; rather, it continues as normal until the traffic density reaches the limits of the system and then ceases altogether for new calls. There is a way to reduce interference that does not require strong central control. That technique, known as spread-spectrum communication, has been used for some time in military applications where interference often consists of deliberate jamming of signals. This interference, of course, is not under the control of the communicator, nor is it subject to government regulation. Military communication systems need to avoid unauthorized eavesdropping on confidential transmissions, a problem alleviated by the use of spreadspectrum techniques. Privacy is also a concern for personal communication systems, but many current analog systems, such as cordless and cellular telephone systems, have nonexistent or very poor protection of privacy. For these reasons, and because the availability of large-scale integrated circuits has reduced the costs involved, there has recently been a great deal of interest in the use of spread-spectrum technology in personal communication systems for both voice and data. The basic idea in spread-spectrum systems is, as the name implies, to spread the signal over a much wider portion of the spectrum than usual. A simple audio signal that would normally occupy only a few kilohertz of spectrum can be expanded to cover many megahertz. Thus only a small portion of the signal is likely to be masked by any interfering signal. Of course, the average power density, expressed in watts per hertz of bandwidth, is also reduced, and this often results in a signal-to-noise ratio of less than one (that is, the signal power in any given frequency range is less than the noise power in the same bandwidth). It may seem at first glance that this would make the signal almost impossible to detect, which is true unless special techniques are used to de-spread the signal while at the same time spreading the energy from interfering signals. In fact, the low average power density of spread-spectrum signals is responsible for their relative immunity from both interference and eavesdropping.

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EXAMPLE 4.6

Y
A voice transmission occupies a channel 30 kHz wide. Suppose a spread-spectrum system is used to increase its bandwidth to 10 MHz. If the signal has a total signal power of 110 dBm at the receiver input and the system noise temperature referred to the same point is 300 K, calculate the signal-to-noise ratio for both systems.

SOLUTION
Recall from Chapter 1 that thermal noise power is given by PN = kTB where PN = noise power in watts k = Boltzmanns constant: 1.38 1023 joules/kelvin (J/K) T = absolute temperature in kelvins B = noise power bandwidth in hertz In general, the noise power bandwidth for a system will be approximately equal to the receiver bandwidth. For the signal with a bandwidth of 30 kHz and a noise temperature of 300 K, PN (30 kHz) = 1.38 1023 J/K 300 K 30 103 Hz = 124 1018 W = 129 dBm When the signal bandwidth increases to 10 MHz, the signal is spread over a much wider region of the spectrum, and a receiver designed to receive the whole signal bandwidth would need a bandwidth of 10 MHz as well. It would receive a noise power equal to PN(10 MHz) = 1.38 1023 J/K 300 K 10 106 Hz = 41.4 1015 W = 104 dBm With both signal and noise in dBm, we can subtract to get the signal-to-noise ratio. For the 30 kHz bandwidth, S/N = 110 dBm (129 dBm) = 19 dB For the 10 MHz bandwidth, S/N = 110 dBm (104 dBm) = 6 dB

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Spread-spectrum communication is especially effective in a portable or mobile environment. Cancellation due to the reflection of signals often causes very deep fades, called Rayleigh fading , over a narrow frequency range. When one of these fades happens to coincide with the frequency in use, the signal can be lost completely. With spread spectrum, only a small part of the communication will be lost, and this can usually be made up, at least in digital schemes, by the use of error-correcting codes. There are two important types of spread-spectrum systems. They are known as frequency hopping and direct sequence.

FrequencyHopping Systems

Frequency hopping is the simpler of the two spread-spectrum techniques. A frequency synthesizer is used to generate a carrier in the ordinary way. There is one difference, however: instead of operating at a fixed frequency, the synthesizer changes frequency many times per second according to a preprogrammed sequence of channels. This sequence is known as a pseudo-random noise (PN) sequence because, to an outside observer who has not been given the sequence, the transmitted frequency appears to hop about in a completely random and unpredictable fashion. In reality, the sequence is not random at all, and a receiver which has been programmed with the same sequence can easily follow the transmitter as it hops and the message can be decoded normally. Since the frequency-hopping signal typically spends only a few milliseconds or less on each channel, any interference to it from a signal on that frequency will be of short duration. If an analog modulation scheme is used for voice, the interference will appear as a click and may pass unnoticed. If the spread-spectrum signal is modulated using digital techniques, an errorcorrecting code can be employed that will allow these brief interruptions in the received signal to be ignored, and the user will probably not experience any signal degradation at all. Thus reliable communication can be achieved in spite of interference.

EXAMPLE 4.7

Y
A frequency-hopping spread-spectrum system hops to each of 100 frequencies every ten seconds. How long does it spend on each frequency?

SOLUTION
The amount of time spent on each frequency is t = 10 seconds/100 hops = 0.1 second per hop

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If the frequency band used by the spread-spectrum system contains known sources of interference, such as carriers from other types of service, the frequency-hopping scheme can be designed to avoid these frequencies entirely. Otherwise, the communication system will degrade gracefully as the number of interfering signals increases, since each new signal will simply increase the noise level slightly.

Direct-Sequence Systems

The direct-sequence form of spread-spectrum communication is commonly used with digital modulation schemes. The idea is to modulate the transmitter with a bit stream consisting of pseudo-random noise (PN) that has a much higher rate than the actual data to be communicated. The term pseudo-random means that the bit stream appears at first glance to be a random sequence of zeros and ones but is actually generated in such a way as to repeat exactly from time to time. The data to be transmitted is combined with the PN. One common technique is to invert all the bits of the PN stream during the time the real data is represented by a one and to leave the PN bit stream unchanged when a data zero is to be transmitted. The extra bits transmitted in this way are called chips, and the resulting bit rate is known as the chipping rate. Most direct-sequence spread-spectrum systems use a chipping rate at least ten times as great as the bit rate of the actual information to be transmitted. The use of the high-speed PN sequence results in an increase in the bandwidth of the signal, regardless of what modulation scheme is used to encode the bits into the signal. Recall from Hartleys Law (Equation 4.1) that for any given modulation scheme, the bandwidth is proportional to the bit rate. It follows from Hartleys Law that a direct-sequence system transmitting a total of ten bits for each information bit will use ten times as much bandwidth as a narrowband signal with the same type of modulation and the same information rate. That is, the sidebands will extend ten times as far from the carrier, as illustrated in Figure 4.11. Direct-sequence spread-spectrum schemes typically use some form of phase-shift keying (PSK).

FIGURE 4.11

Direct-sequence spread-spectrum signal

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EXAMPLE 4.8

Y
A digital communication scheme uses DQPSK. It is to transmit a compressed PCM audio signal which has a bit rate of 16 kb/s. The chipping rate is 10 to 1. Calculate the number of signal changes (symbols) which must be transmitted each second.

SOLUTION
The total bit rate, including the chips, is 10 times the data rate, or 160 kb/s. Since there are four signal states, each state represents two bits. Therefore the symbol rate is 160/2 = 80 kilobaud

X
Expanding the bandwidth by a factor of ten while keeping the transmitted power constant will decrease the received signal-to-noise ratio by the same factor. As before, the pseudo-random sequence is known to the receiver, which has to separate the information signal from the chips. A processing gain , also called spreading gain , can be defined equal to the bandwidth expansion (which, for direct-sequence spread spectrum, is also equal to the ratio of chips to information bits): Gp = where G p = processing gain B RF = RF (transmitted) bandwidth B BB = baseband (before spreading) bandwidth The processing gain also describes the amount by which the signalto-noise ratio of the signal is reduced by the spreading process during transmission. Of course, this reduction is reversed at the receiver. Since signal-to-noise ratio is generally given in decibels, it would make sense to express the processing gain that way too, that is: G p (dB) = 10 log G p G p (dB) = ( S/N ) i (dB) ( S/N ) o (dB) where G p (dB) = processing gain in decibels ( S/N ) i (dB) = signal-to-noise ratio in dB before spreading ( S/N ) o (dB) = signal-to-noise ratio in dB after spreading (4.8) BRF BBB (4.7)

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EXAMPLE 4.9

Y
A signal would have a bandwidth of 200 kHz and a signal-to-noise ratio of 20 dB if transmitted without spreading. It is spread using a chipping rate of 50:1. Calculate its bandwidth and signal-to-noise ratio after spreading.

SOLUTION
The bandwidth after spreading can be found from Equation (4.7): Gp = BRF BBB

BRF = G p BBB = 50 200 kHz = 10 MHz The processing gain in decibels is Gp (dB) = 10 log Gp = 10 log 50 = 17 dB The signal-to-noise ratio after spreading is given by Equation (4.8): Gp (dB) = (S/N)i (dB) (S/N)o (dB) (S/N)o (dB) = (S/N)i (dB) Gp (dB) = 20 dB 17 dB = 3 dB

X
Reception of Spread-Spectrum Signals
The type of receiver required for spread-spectrum reception depends on how the signal is generated. For frequency-hopped transmissions, what is needed is a relatively conventional narrowband receiver that hops in the same way as and is synchronized with the transmitter. This requires that the receiver be given the frequency-hopping sequence, and there be some form of synchronizing signal (such as the signal usually sent at the start of a data frame in digital communication) to keep the transmitter and receiver synchronized. Some means must also be provided to allow the receiver to detect the start of a transmission, since, if this is left to chance, the transmitter and receiver will most likely be on different frequencies when a transmission begins. One way to synchronize the transmitter and receiver is to have the transmitter send a tone on a prearranged channel at the start of each transmission, before it begins hopping. The receiver can synchronize by detecting

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the end of the tone and then begin hopping according to the prearranged PN sequence. Of course, this method fails if there happens to be an interfering signal on the designated synchronizing channel at the time synchronization is attempted. A more reliable method of synchronizing frequency-hopping systems is for the transmitter to visit several channels in a prearranged order before beginning a normal transmission. The receiver can monitor all of these channels sequentially, and once it detects the transmission, it can sample the next channel in the sequence for verification and synchronization. Direct-sequence spread-spectrum transmissions require different reception techniques. Narrowband receivers will not work with these signals, which occupy a wide bandwidth on a continuous basis. A wideband receiver is required, but a conventional wideband receiver would output only noise. In order to distinguish the desired signal from noise and interfering signals, which over the bandwidth of the receiver are much stronger than the desired signal, a technique called autocorrelation is used. Essentially this involves multiplying the received signal by a signal generated at the receiver from the PN code. When the input signal corresponds to the PN code, the output from the autocorrelator will be large; at other times this output will be very small. Of course, once again the transmitter and receiver will probably not be synchronized at the start of a transmission, so the transmitter sends a preamble signal, which is a prearranged sequence of ones and zeros, to let the receiver synchronize with the transmitter.

Code-Division Multiple Access (CDMA)

Traditionally, most analog communication systems have used frequencydivision multiplexing, and digital systems have employed time-division multiplexing, in order to combine many information signals into a single transmission channel. When the signals originate from different sources, these two methods (which have already been studied) become frequencydivision multiple access (FDMA) and time-division multiple access (TDMA), respectively. Spread-spectrum communication allows a third method for multiplexing signals from different sources code-division multiple access (CDMA). All that is required is for each transmitter to be assigned a different pseudo-noise (PN) sequence. If possible, orthogonal sequences should be chosen; that is, the transmitters should never be in the same place at the same time. The PN sequence for the transmitter is given only to the receiver that is to operate with that transmitter. This receiver will then receive only the correct transmissions, and all other receivers will ignore these signals. This technique, which is applicable to both frequency-hopping and direct-sequence transmissions, allows many transmissions to share the same spread-spectrum channel.

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It is not necessary for all transmitters to have orthogonal PN sequences in order to use CDMA. If some of the sequences are not orthogonal, there will be some mutual interference between users. However, the system can still operate until there are so many users that the signal-to-noise ratio becomes unacceptably low. In order that all transmissions other than the desired one blend together at the receiver as noise, it is highly desirable in a CDMA system that all received signals have about the same strength at the receiver. Obviously this is not always possible, such as in an unlicensed environment like that of cordless phones. But where it is possible, the benefits of close control over transmitter power levels are great. We will see this idea applied later when we look at CDMA PCS systems.

'

Summary

The main points to remember from this chapter are:


(

Digital wireless transmission uses frequency, phase, and amplitude variations, just as does analog transmission. The maximum data rate for a channel is a function of bandwidth, modulation scheme, and signal-to-noise ratio. In general, more complex modulation schemes can achieve higher data rates, but only when the signal-to-noise ratio is high. Frequency-shift keying (FSK) uses two (and occasionally more than two) transmitted frequencies to achieve modest data rates with good performance in noisy channels. Gaussian minimum-shift keying is a special case of FSK that achieves the minimum bandwidth possible for a two-frequency FSK system at a given data rate. Most phase-shift keying (PSK) systems use four phase angles for somewhat higher data rates than are achievable with FSK. Quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) achieves higher data rates than FSK or PSK by using a combination of amplitude and phase modulation. QAM requires a relatively noise-free channel to realize its advantages. Frequency-division multiplexing and multiple-access schemes divide available bandwidth among channels, with each operating full-time. Time-division multiplexing and multiple-access schemes divide the available time among channels, with each using the full bandwidth. Spread-spectrum systems reduce interference by spreading each signal over a large bandwidth.

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Code-division multiple-access (CDMA) schemes assign all channels full-time to the full available bandwidth. Channels are separated by spreading and despreading codes.

( Equation List
I = ktB C = 2B log2 M C = B log2(1 + S/N) C = S log2 M m s = 0.5 b Gp = BRF BBB (4.1) (4.2) (4.3) (4.5) (4.6) (4.7)

Gp (dB) = (S/N)i (dB) (S/N)o (dB)

(4.8)

( Key Terms
amplitude-shift keying (ASK) data transmission by varying the amplitude of the transmitted signal audio frequency-shift keying (AFSK) use of an audio tone of two or more different frequencies to modulate a conventional analog transmitter for data transmission baud rate speed at which symbols are transmitted in a digital communication system bit rate speed at which data is transmitted in a digital communication system chips extra bits used to spread the signal in a direct-sequence spread-spectrum system code-division multiple access (CDMA) system to allow multiple users to use the same frequency using separate PN codes and a spread-spectrum modulation scheme

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constellation diagram in digital communication, a pattern showing all the possible combinations of amplitude and phase for a signal delta phase-shift keying (DPSK) digital modulation scheme that represents a bit pattern by a change in phase from the previous state dibit system any digital modulation scheme that codes two bits of information per transmitted symbol direct-sequence spread spectrum technique for increasing the bandwidth of a transmitted signal by combining it with a pseudo-random noise signal with a higher bit rate frequency hopping form of spread-spectrum communication in which the RF carrier continually moves from one frequency to another according to a prearranged pseudo-random pattern frequency-division multiple access (FDMA) sharing of a communication channel among multiple users by assigning each a different carrier frequency frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) combining of several signals into one communication channel by assigning each a different carrier frequency frequency-shift keying (FSK) digital modulation scheme using two or more different output frequencies Gaussian minimum-shift keying (GMSK) variant of FSK which uses the minimum possible frequency shift for a given bit rate mark in digital communication, a logic one modem acronym for modulator-demodulator; device to enable data to be transmitted via an analog channel multiple access multiplexing use of a single channel by more than one transmitter use of a single channel by more than one signal

phase-shift keying (PSK) digital modulation scheme in which the phase of the transmitted signal is varied in accordance with the baseband data signal processing gain improvement in interference rejection due to spreading in a spread-spectrum system pseudo-random noise (PN) sequence a transmitted series of ones and zeros that repeats after a set time, and which appears random if the sequence is not known to the receiver quadrature AM (QAM) modulation scheme in which both the amplitude and phase of the transmitted signal are varied by the baseband signal

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quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK or DQPSK) digital modulation scheme using four different transmitted phase angles Rayleigh fading variation in received signal strength due to multipath propagation space binary zero spreading gain improvement in interference rejection due to spreading in a spread-spectrum system symbol in digital communication, the state of the signal at a sampling time time-division multiple access (TDMA) system to allow several transmissions to use a single channel by assigning time slots to each time-division multiplexing (TDM) system to combine several data streams onto a single channel by assigning time slots to each

( Questions
1. What is the meaning of the term modem? 2. What parameters of a sine-wave carrier can be modulated? 3. Name the three most common basic types of digital modulation. 4. Which type of modulation is likely to be used for: (a) low data rates (b) moderate data rates (c) high data rates 5. What signal parameters are varied with QAM? 6. What factors limit the maximum data rate for a channel? 7. What is an eye diagram? 8. Explain the difference between the terms bit rate and baud rate. 9. Explain the origin and meaning of the terms mark and space. 10. What is the difference between FSK, AFSK, and GMSK? 11. Why is delta phase-shift keying the most common form of PSK? 12. What is the advantage of /4 DQPSK? 13. What is represented by the dots in a constellation diagram for a QAM system? 14. Compare the modulation schemes studied in this chapter, listing as many advantages and disadvantages for each as you can.

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15. List and describe the three multiple-access systems in common use. 16. What is a DS-1 signal? 17. Compare frequency-hopping and direct-sequence spread-spectrum systems. 18. What happens when a call is blocked? 19. How do spread-spectrum systems reduce the effect of fading? 20. Briefly describe what is meant by orthogonal spread-spectrum signals.

( Problems
1. The North American analog cellular radio system uses FM with channels 30 kHz wide. Suppose such a channel were used for digital communication. If the available signal-to-noise ratio is 20 dB, calculate the maximum theoretical bit rate and the corresponding baud rate using: (a) a two-level code (b) a four-level code 2. How much bandwidth would be required to transmit a DS-1 signal (1.544 Mb/s) using a four-level code: (a) assuming a noiseless channel? (b) with a signal-to-noise ratio of 15 dB? 3. The AFSK system described in the text operates at 1200 bits per second using an FM signal modulated by tones at 1200 and 2200 Hz, with a frequency deviation of 5 kHz. Calculate the efficiency of this system in bits per second per hertz of bandwidth by using Carsons rule (see Chapter 2) to calculate the approximate radio frequency bandwidth for this system. Is this system bandwidth-efficient? 4. A typical HF radioteletype system uses 170 Hz shift between mark and space frequencies and a bit rate of 45 bits per second. What would be the bit rate if GMSK were used for this system? 5. Consider a QPSK system that will transmit three bits of information per symbol. (a) How many phase angles are needed? (b) Draw a vector diagram for such a system. (c) Would this system have any advantages compared with the dibit systems described in the text? Any disadvantages?

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6. A constellation diagram for a modem is shown in Figure 4.12.


FIGURE 4.12

( ( ( ( (((( ( ( ( ( ((((

(a) What type of modulation is this? (b) If the transmitted bit rate is 9600 b/s, what will be the baud rate using this modem? 7. A microwave radio system uses 256-QAM, that is, there are 256 possible amplitude and phase combinations. (a) How many bits per symbol does it use? (b) If it has a channel with 40-MHz bandwidth, what is its maximum data rate, ignoring noise? 8. Draw a constellation pattern for a modem that uses eight equallyspaced phase angles and four equally-spaced amplitude levels. If the modem operates at 4800 baud, what is its bit rate? 9. An ordinary broadcast television channel has a bandwidth of 6 MHz. How many FM radio stations (with a bandwidth of 200 kHz each) could be accommodated in one television channel using FDM? 10. Suppose the TV channel described in the previous problem is used for voice-quality transmission using SSBSC AM with a bandwidth of 4 kHz per channel. How many voice channels can be carried? 11. Suppose the TV channel described in the previous problem is used for digital audio communication. Assume the RF system can support 2 b/s/Hz of RF bandwidth. (a) What is the total available bit rate? (b) How many telephone voice signals, at a bit rate of 64 kb/s each, could be accommodated on this channel using TDM? (c) How many high-quality stereo audio signals could be accommodated? Assume 16-bit samples, with a sampling rate of 44.1 kSa/s, and ignore error correction and data compression.

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12. Suppose that a voice signal normally occupies 30 kHz of bandwidth and has a signal-to-noise ratio of 20 dB. Spread-spectrum techniques are used to increase its bandwidth to 2 MHz. (a) What is the signal-to-noise ratio of the spread signal? (b) What is the processing gain, in decibels? 13. Suppose a frequency-hopping system hops among 500 channels. How many orthogonal PN sequences are possible? 14. Suppose there is a narrowband analog signal on one of the channels visited by a frequency-hopping system. (a) What is the effect on the narrowband signal of the spread-spectrum signals? (b) What is the effect on the spread-spectrum signals of the narrowband signal? 15. A direct-sequence spread-spectrum system uses FSK with a chipping rate of 20 to 1. The signal-to-noise ratio for the spread signal is 5 dB (that is, the signal is 5 dB weaker than the noise in the same bandwidth). If the data is transmitted at 50 kb/s, calculate: (a) the chipping rate (b) the bandwidth occupied by the spread signal if the modulation scheme used allows 1.5 bits/s/Hz (c) the signal-to-noise ratio for the despread signal at the receiver 16. A signal has a bit rate of 20 kb/s. Find the baud rate if the signal is transmitted using: (a) FSK with two frequencies (b) QPSK with four phase angles (c) QAM with four phase angles and four amplitudes 17. Ten voice signals are to be multiplexed and transmitted. The analog signal occupies 4 kHz of bandwidth and can be digitized using a vocoder at 12 kb/s. Calculate the required bandwidth for each of the following possibilities. (a) FDMA using analog FM with 12 kHz deviation (use Carsons rule to find the bandwidth for one signal). Ignore guard bands between channels. (b) FDMA using SSBSC AM. Ignore guard bands. (c) TDM using GMSK. Assume a noiseless channel. (d) TDMA using QPSK. Assume a noiseless channel. (e) CDMA using frequency-hopping with 10 available channels. Use GMSK and assume a noiseless channel. (f) CDMA using direct-sequence, QPSK with a chipping rate of 10:1.

Basic Telephony

Objectives
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
( (

Describe the topology of the switched telephone network. Describe the various signals present on a local-loop telephone line and explain the function of each. Describe and compare in-band and out-of-band signaling systems for telephony. Explain the advantages of common-channel signaling. Describe Signaling System Seven and explain its use in keeping track of calls. Explain the use of time-division multiplexing in telephony and perform bit rate calculations with TDM signals.

( (

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5.1

Introduction
The public switched telephone system (PSTN) is undoubtedly the largest, and probably the most important communication system in the world. The reasons for this are contained in those first two words. It is public in the sense that anyone can connect to it. Because it is switched, it is possible, in theory at least, for anyone to communicate with anyone else. This makes the telephone system very different from broadcasting systems and from private communication networks. The addition of personal wireless communication to the PSTN has made it even more ubiquitous. Radio systems that were separate entities are increasingly becoming extensions of the telephone system. Consider, for instance, the difference between citizens band radio and cellular radio. The former is a separate system, useful only when those who wish to communicate have compatible radios and are within radio range. The latter can connect its user to any telephone in the world, regardless of distance. The telephone network employs many of the most interesting developments in communication practice, such as cellular radio, fiber optics, and digital signal transmission, but it remains in many ways consistent with its origins in the nineteenth century. This will become obvious when we look at telephone signaling systems and the voltage and current levels found on subscriber lines. Compatibility has been maintained in most areas of the system, so simple dial-type telephones can coexist with modern datacommunication equipment. Though originally intended only for voice communication, the switched telephone network has been adapted to serve many other needs, including data communication, facsimile, and even video. This chapter introduces the telephone system and describes the ways in which it can connect with wireless systems. A basic knowledge of ordinary voice telephony (plain old telephone service or POTS in telephone jargon) will be very useful as we consider more advanced uses.

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5.2

Network Topology
Switched networks can be categorized as circuit-switched or packetswitched . In a circuit-switched network there is a dedicated physical path from transmitter to receiver for the duration of the communication. The PSTN is a circuit-switched network. Packet-switched networks route short bursts of data, called packets, from point to point as needed. A virtual connection may exist, but it is merely a record of the addresses on the network between which communication takes place. Successive packets may take

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different paths through the network. The internet is a packet-switched network. Both types of networks have their advantages. Circuit switching is often more reliable, especially when it is important that messages arrive quickly and in the same order in which they were sent, as is the case with telephony. On the other hand, packet switching can make more efficient use of network resources. In a circuit-switched network the circuit is often idle. For instance, during a phone call circuits are active in both directions, but most of the time only one person is talking. It is possible to use packet-switched networks for telephony (internet phone is an example), and it looks as if this is the direction networks are moving. Wireless networks can be either circuit-switched (cellular phones) or packet-switched (wireless local-area networks), and we shall examine both types later in this book.

PSTN Structure

Figure 5.1 shows the basic structure, or topology, of a local calling area (known as a Local Access and Transport Area or LATA) in a typical switched telephone system. Each subscriber is normally connected via a separate twisted-pair line, called a local loop, to a central office, also called an end office, where circuit switching is done. Actually the term office can be deceiving: in urban areas, it is quite possible for there to be more than one central office in the same building. The central office represents one exchange: that is, in a typical sevendigit telephone number, all the lines connected to a single central office begin with the same three digits. Thus there can be ten thousand telephones

FIGURE 5.1 Local access and transport area

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connected to a central office. Subscribers connected to the same central office can communicate with each other by means of the central office switch, which can connect any line to any other line. Modern switches are digital, so the analog local-loop signals are digitized as they enter the central office. The central offices themselves are connected together by trunk lines ; any subscriber can contact any other subscriber within a local calling area. There are not enough trunks or enough switching facilities for every subscriber to use the system at once, so there is the possibility of overload. This can make it impossible for a subscriber to place a call, an occurrence that is known as call blocking. The likely number of simultaneous conversations is predicted by statistical methods, and should usually be exceeded only during emergencies. When there are no available trunks between two central offices, sometimes a connection can be made through a tandem office, which connects central offices without having any direct connections to individual telephones. Long-distance calls are completed using a mesh of long-distance switching centers. The network usually lets the system find a direct route from one area of the country to the other, and there is never a need for more than one intermediate switch. Figure 5.2 shows this type of system. The telephone system in the United States and Canada was formerly a monopoly, and it still is in much of the world. This is changing. Competition for long-distance calls is well established, and competition for the local subscriber loop is just beginning. Each competing long-distance carrier has its own connection to the local access and transport area. To keep the diagram simple, only two long-distance carriers are shown in Figure 5.2. Each carrier has its own connection, called a point of presence (POP), to the local telephone system. Wireless telephone systems are connected to the PSTN in a similar fashion.

FIGURE 5.2 Long-distance network

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Until now, local-loop competitors have leased their physical connections from the original local monopoly. As local-loop competitors using their own cable (for example, cable television companies) enter the market, they too will require points of presence. New switching equipment and trunk lines are digital, with time-division multiplexing used to combine many signals on one line. Fiber optics technology is increasingly used for trunk lines; other common media include terrestrial microwave links, geostationary satellites, and coaxial cable. Short distances between central offices may be covered using multipair cable, which has many twisted pairs in one protective sheath. So far, most local loops are still analog using twisted-pair copper wire, but that seems likely to change in the future. Eventually the system will be digital from one end to the other, and most of it will employ fiber-optic cable. However, telephone equipment is built for maximum reliability and lasts a long time. It is also expensive, and telephone companies quite naturally expect to use it until it wears out. It will be a few more years before we have a complete digital network.

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5.3

The Local Loop and Its Signals


Normally each individual subscriber telephone is connected to the central office by a single twisted pair of wires. The wires are twisted to help cancel their magnetic fields and reduce interference, called crosstalk, between circuits in the same cable. It is common practice to run a four-conductor cable to each residence, but only two of these wires (usually red and green) are used for a single line. The others (black and yellow) allow for the installation of a second line without running more cable. Recently there has been a trend toward running multiplexed digital signals to junction boxes in neighborhoods, switching at that point to analog signals on individual pairs, in an effort to reduce the total amount of copper cable. There has been some installation of optical fiber, though the last section of loop to the customer normally remains copper. In the future, fiber-in-the-loop (FITL) may be used. It will cost more because of the necessity of converting back and forth between electrical and optical signals at each subscriber location, but the bandwidth will be vastly increased. This will allow a great number of additional services, such as cable television and high-speed internet access, to be carried on the same fiber. The local loop performs several functions. It carries voice signals both ways. It must also carry signaling information both ways: dialing pulses or tones to the central office from the customer and dial tones, ringing, busy

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signals, and prerecorded messages from the network to the subscriber. Wireless telephones must perform all of these functions, although usually not in exactly the same way. In addition to the previously mentioned functions, the twisted pair must transmit power from the central office to operate the telephone and ring the bell. When the phone is on hook (not in use), the central office maintains a voltage of about 48 V dc across the line. Of the two wires in the twisted pair, one, normally the green, is designated tip and the other (red), ring. The ring is connected to the negative side of the supply. Most of the time in electronic equipment a red wire is positive but not here! The tip and ring terminology dates from the days of manual switchboards; it describes the connections to the plugs used in these boards. The positive (tip) side of the supply is grounded. The central office supply is called the battery. The voltage does, in fact, derive from a storage battery that is constantly under charge. This allows the telephone system to function during electrical power outages, whether they occur at the central office or at the customers premises, and has resulted in a well-deserved reputation for reliability. If wireless systems are to strive for similar performance, they too need emergency power. This is especially important for cellular phone and PCS services, because many people subscribe to these services in order to have emergency communication when needed. When the phone is on hook, it represents an open circuit to the dc battery voltage. The subscriber signals the central office that he or she wishes to make a call by lifting the receiver, placing the instrument off hook. The telephone has a relatively low resistance (about 200 ohms) when off hook, which allows a dc current to flow in the loop. The presence of this current signals the central office to make a line available (the telephone is said to have seized the line). When off hook, the voltage across the telephone drops considerably, to about 5 to 10 volts, due to the resistance of the telephone line. Resistance can also be added at the central office, if necessary, to maintain the loop current in the desired range of approximately 20 to 80 mA. Figure 5.3 illustrates this capability.

EXAMPLE 5.1

Y
A local loop has a resistance of 1 k, and the telephone connected to it has an off-hook resistance of 200 . Calculate the loop current and the voltage across the telephone when the phone is: (a) on hook (b) off hook

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FIGURE 5.3

Local loop

SOLUTION
(a) When the telephone is on hook, its dc resistance is infinite so the current is zero. Since there will be no voltage drop around the loop, except at the phone itself, the full battery voltage will appear across the phone. (b) When the phone is off hook, the total loop resistance is RT = 1000 + 200 = 1200 Then the loop current is I = 48 V = 40 mA 1200

The voltage across the telephone is V = IR = 40 mA 200 = 8 V

X
Once a line has been assigned, the office signals the user to proceed by transmitting a dial tone, which consists of 350 Hz and 440 Hz signals added together. Dialing can be accomplished in one of two ways. The old-fashioned rotary dial functions by breaking the loop circuit at a 10 Hz rate, with the number of interruptions equal to the number dialed. That is, dialing the number 5 causes five interruptions (pulses) in the loop current. This technique is called pulse dialing and can be emulated by some electronic telephones. The second and much more efficient way is for the phone to transmit a combination of two tones for each number. This is officially known as dual-tone

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multi-frequency (DTMF) dialing and is commonly referred to as TouchTone or just tone dialing (the term Touch-Tone is a registered trade mark of AT&T). Table 5.1 shows the combinations of tones used for each digit. This system improves efficiency because digits can be transmitted in much less time than with pulse dialing.

TABLE 5.1

DTMF Frequencies
1209 1 4 7 * 1336 2 5 8 0 1477 3 6 9 # 1633 A B C D

Frequencies (Hz) 697 770 852 941

The letters A through D are included in the system specifications but are not present on ordinary telephones. Some wireless equipment uses them for special functions.

EXAMPLE 5.2

Y
What frequencies are generated by a telephone using DTMF signaling when the number 9 is pressed?

SOLUTION
Use Table 5.1. Go across from 9 to find 852 Hz; go up to find 1477 Hz. Therefore, the output frequencies are 852 Hz and 1477 Hz.

X
Assume for now that the called party is connected to the same central office as the calling party; that is, they have the same exchange, and the first three numbers in a typical seven-digit telephone number are the same. When the switch connects to the called party, it must send an intermittent ringing signal to that telephone. The standard for the ringing voltage at the central office is 100 V ac at a frequency of 20 Hz, superimposed on the 48 V dc battery voltage. Of course, the voltage at the telephone will be less than that, due to the resistance of the wire in the local loop. In order to respond to

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the ac ringing signal when on-hook, without allowing dc current to flow, the telephone ac-couples the ringer to the line. In a conventional telephone with an electromechanical ringer, the ringer consists of two coils and a capacitor in series across the line. While the called telephone is ringing, the central office switch sends a pulsed ac voltage, called a ringback signal, to the calling telephone. The ringback signal consists of 440 and 480 Hz signals added together. When the called phone goes off-hook, the circuit is complete, the ringing voltages are switched off, and conversation can begin. If the circuit corresponding to the called telephone is in use, a busy signal will be returned to the caller. See Table 5.2 for a summary of the signals described so far. TABLE 5.2 Local-Loop Voltages and Currents
48 V dc 510 V dc, depending on loop resistance 2380 mA dc, depending on loop resistance 350 and 440 Hz 100 V ac, 20 Hz, superimposed on 48 V dc Approximately 80 V ac, superimposed on 48 V dc 440 and 480 Hz; pulsed 2 s on, 4 s off 480 Hz and 620 Hz; pulsed 0.5 s on, 0.5 s off

On-hook voltage Off-hook voltage (at phone) Off-hook current Dial tone Ringing voltage (at office) Ringing voltage (at phone)

Ringback voltage Busy signal

The single twisted-pair local loop is required to carry both sides of the conversation simultaneously, providing full-duplex communication. This is called a two-wire system. The rest of the network uses separate transmission paths for each direction, a topology called a four-wire system. Converting between the two systems is done using a circuit called a hybrid coil, shown in Figure 5.4. The same thing can be done electronically. Signals from the transmitter will add at the line and cancel at the receiver. Similarly, signals coming in on the line will cancel at the transmitter and add at the receiver. Deliberately unbalancing the circuit allows a small portion of the transmitter signal to reach the receiver, creating a sidetone that lets the user know the line is active and hear what is being transmitted. Hybrid coils are used both in the phone and in the central office line cards.

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FIGURE 5.4 Hybrid coil

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5.4

Digital Telephony
The telephone system was completely analog at its beginning in the nineteenth century, of course. Over the past 30 years or so, it has gradually been converted to digital technology and the process is not yet complete. The digital techniques were originally designed to work in conjunction with the existing analog system. This, and the fact that many of the standards for digital technology are quite old, should help the reader understand some of the rather peculiar ways things are done in digital telephony. The basics of digital transmission of analog signals by pulse-code modulation (PCM) were discussed in Chapter 3. We can summarize the results here as they apply to the North American system. The numbers vary slightly in some other countries but the principles are the same. The analog voice signal is low-pass filtered at about 3.4 kHz and then digitized, using 8-bit samples at a sampling rate of 8 kHz. The signal is compressed, either before or after digitization, to improve its signal-to-noise ratio. The bit rate for one voice signal is then b ( voice ) = 8 bits/sample 8000 samples/second = 64 kb/s (5.1)

The sample rate is determined by the maximum frequency to be transmitted, which was chosen for compatibility with existing analog FDM transmission (which uses SSBSC AM with a bandwidth of 4 kHz per channel, including guardbands between channels). An upper frequency limit of about 3.4 kHz has long been considered adequate for voice transmission. In Chapter 3 we found that a much lower bit rate could be used for telephone-quality voice using data compression and vocoders. These techniques are not employed in the ordinary telephone system, though data

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compression is used in special situations where bandwidth is limited and expensive, as in intercontinental undersea cables. The connection of wireless systems to the PSTN requires conversion of standards in both directions. In general, wireless systems use ordinary telephone quality as a guide, though many of these systems fall short of what has been considered toll quality, that is, good enough to charge long-distance rates for. Until now, users have been so delighted to have portable telephones that they have been willing to put up with lower quality. This situation is changing quickly now that wireless phones are everywhere.

Time-Division Multiplexing

In Chapter 3 we discussed the simplest form of time-division multiplexed telephone signal. The DS-1 signal frame has one sample (8 bits) from each of 24 telephone channels plus one framing bit. This gives it a bit rate of b ( DS-1 ) = 24 64 kb/s + 1 8 kb/s = 1.544 Mb/s. (5.2)

When this signal is transmitted over copper wire, the result is known as a T-1 carrier. That is, the signal includes only the coding into ones and zeros, while the carrier also includes the voltage levels used. See Figure 5.5 for a review of the DS-1 frame, which we looked at in Chapter 4.
FIGURE 5.5 DS-1 signal

A DS-1 signal can equally well be used for data communication. A single time slot may be used or any number of time slots can be combined for higher bit rates. The framing bits are used to enable the receiver to determine which bit (and in what sample) is being received at a given time. In addition, the receiver must often distinguish between frames in order to decode signaling information. In one frame out of every six, each of the least significant bits in the 24 samples may be used for signaling information rather than as part of the PCM signal. This information includes on/off hook status, dial tone, dialed digits, ringback, and busy signal. This bit robbing for signaling results in a very slight degradation of voice signal quality; for instance, the signal-to-noise ratio is reduced by about two decibels.

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The frames are divided into groups of 12 with different signaling information in the sixth and twelfth frames, known as the A and B frames, in a sequence. A group of twelve frames is called a superframe. As a result, the receiver is required to count frames up to 12. To allow the receiver to accomplish this, the framing bit alternates between two sequences, 100011 and 011100. The underlined bits indicate the A and B signaling frames, respectively. The stolen signaling bits can be used to indicate basic line states such as on-hook and off-hook, ringing, and busy signals. Unfortunately the effect of bit robbing on data transmission is much greater than it is for voice. Occasional bit errors are acceptable in voice signals, but certainly not in data. To avoid errors when bit robbing is used, one bit from each 8-bit sample is discarded in every frame. This reduces the data capacity of one voice channel from 64 kb/s to 56 kb/s. Of course, channels can be combined for higher rates, but the loss in throughput is very substantial. Bit robbing can be eliminated by using common-channel signaling, which is described in the next section.

Digital Signal Hierarchy

The DS-1 signal and T-1 carrier described earlier represent the lowest level in a hierarchy of TDM signals with higher bit rates. All of these signals contain PCM audio signals, each sampled 8,000 times per second. As the number of multiplexed voice signals increases, so does the bit rate. This requires that the channel have a wider frequency response and that variations of time delay with frequency be held to a low level. Twisted-pair lines, when specially conditioned, can be used for the T1 and T2 carriers, but higher data rates require channels with greater bandwidth, such as coaxial cable, microwave radio, or optical fiber. See Table 5.3 for more details. TABLE 5.3
Carrier T1 T1C T2 T3 T4 T5

Digital Signal Hierarchy


Signal DS-1 DS-1C DS-2 DS-3 DS-4 DS-5 Voice Channels 24 48 96 672 4032 8064 Bit Rate (Mb/s) 1.544 3.152 6.312 44.736 274.176 560.16

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A glance at the table shows that the math does not seem to be exact. For instance, a DS-1C signal carries as many voice channels as two DS-1 signals, but the bit rate is more than twice as great. The difference is: 3.152 Mb/s 2 1.544 Mb/s = 64 kb/s The extra bits have several uses. They provide synchronization and framing for the demultiplexer. There are also extra bits called stuff bits which are added during multiplexing to compensate for differences between the clock rates of the tributaries and the multiplexer. If the tributary clock rate is slow, more stuff bits will be added to build up the bit rate; if it is fast, fewer stuff bits are needed. This bit stuffing is more formally called justification. Figure 5.6 is an example of the creation of a DS-3 signal by multiplexing other signals.

FIGURE 5.6

Creation of DS-3 signal

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5.5

Telephone-Network Signaling
We have already looked at some of the control and supervisory signals used with the telephone system. The local-loop signals such as DTMF tones, dial tone, busy signal, and ringback signal are examples. All of these signals use the same channel as the voice, but not at the same time. Since they use the same channel, they are called in-channel signals. Their frequencies are also in the same range as voice frequencies; they can be heard by the user, so they are also referred to as in-band signals. We also noted that the telephone instrument communicates its off-hook or on-hook status to the central office by the presence or absence, respectively, of a dc current. This signal is in-channel because it uses the same pair of wires as the voice, but it is out-of-band because the dc current is not in the same frequency range as voice signals. Consequently, the central office can receive the off-hook signal continuously, even during the call. Traditionally, similar methods have been used within the network for such purposes as communicating the number of the calling party to billing equipment, determining which trunk lines are idle (that is, ready for use), and so on. Early systems used dc currents and dial pulses, as with local loops. Later versions used either a switched single-frequency tone at 2600 Hz (called SF signaling ) or, still later, combinations of tones similar to but not the same as the DTMF system and known as MF, ( multi-frequency ) signaling. For a time, that system was plagued by fraud as people ranging from amateur phone phreakers to members of organized crime used so-called blue boxes to duplicate network signaling tones and make long-distance calls without paying for them. However, changes to the network soon eliminated or at least greatly reduced this problem. In-channel but out-of-band signaling is also used. A tone at 3825 Hz can be sent along a long-distance network. It will pass through the allotted 4-kHz channel for each call, but will be filtered out before it reaches the customer telephone. This type of signal replaces the dc loop current as a means of indicating whether the line is in use, since long-distance circuits, unlike local loops, do not have dc continuity. We have seen that the digital signal hierarchy makes available a few bits, stolen from the voice channel, for signaling. These can be used to replace the in-channel tones. However, there are insufficient bits to use for call routing, call display, billing, and other functions of a modern telephone network.

Signaling System Seven

Recently the trend has been to use a completely separate data channel to transmit control information between switches. This common-channel signaling reduces fraud, since users have no access to the control channels, and

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also allows a call to be set up completely before any voice channels are used. The state of the whole network can be known to the control equipment, and the most efficient routes for calls can be planned in advance. Common-channel signaling also makes such services as calling-number identification much more practical. The current version of common-channel signaling is signaling system seven (SS7). It was introduced to the Bell System in the United States in 1980 and has become, with minor variations, a worldwide system. SS7 is a packetswitched data network linking central offices to each other, to long-distance switching centers, and to centralized databases used for such purposes as call display, credit card validation, voice mail, 800 and 900 number routing and (most interesting for our purposes) cellular and PCS telephone roaming information. SS7 allows much more data to be sent more quickly, and with less interference with voice signals, than older signaling schemes involving in-channel signals. SS7 uses dedicated 64 kb/s data channels. Usually one digital voice channel in each direction is reassigned for this purpose; the data rate is the same as for a voice channel to accommodate this. If necessary, an analog channel with modems can be used. One 64 kb/s signaling channel can handle the signaling requirements of many voice channels. Figure 5.7 shows how SS7 connects to the rest of the network. With SS7, calls can be set up with no need to tie up a long-distance voice channel until the connection is made. Since analog local loops do not support common-channel signaling, it is necessary to tie up a voice connection from the subscriber to the central office. If ISDN, described in the next section, is used, voice and control signals can be kept completely separate.
FIGURE 5.7 Signaling system seven (SS7)

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5.6

Digital Local Loops


The analog local loop dates back to the earliest days of telephony, and is certainly outdated. Subscribers now need much greater bandwidth for uses such as high-speed internet access or interactive video than was the case a few years ago. One way to get this bandwidth is to replace the twisted-pair loop with coaxial cable or optical fiber. However, the capacity of a twisted pair is much greater than is required for the single analog signal, with a bandwidth under 4 kHz that it usually carries. Most of the cost of the local loop is in the labor to install it, rather than the cost of the wire itself, so when greater bandwidth is required it makes good sense to redesign the system to increase the capacity of the existing wiring rather than replace the wire. Here is a brief look at two ways of increasing the capacity of twisted-pair local loops.

Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)

The integrated services digital network (ISDN) concept is designed to allow voice and data to be sent in the same way along the same lines. Currently, most subscribers are connected to the switched telephone network by local loops and interface cards designed for analog signals. This is reasonably well-suited to voice communication, but data can be accommodated only by the use of modems. As the telephone network gradually goes digital, it seems logical to send data directly over telephone lines without modems. If the local loop could be made digital, with the codec installed in the telephone instrument, there is no reason why the 64 kb/s data rate required for PCM voice could not also be used for data, at the users discretion. The integrated services digital network concept provides a way to standardize the above idea. The standard encompasses two types of connections to the network. Large users connect at a primary-access point with a data rate of 1.544 Mb/s. This, you will recall, is the same rate as for the DS-1 signal described earlier. It includes 24 channels with a data rate of 64 kb/s each. One of these channels is the D (data) channel and is used for commonchannel signaling, that is, for setting up and monitoring calls. The other 23 channels are called B (bearer) channels and can be used for voice or data, or combined, to handle high-speed data or digitized video signals, for example. Individual terminals connect to the network through a basic interface at the basic access rate of 192 kb/s. Individual terminals in a large organization use the basic access rate to communicate with a private branch exchange (PBX), a small switch dedicated to that organization. Residences and small businesses connect directly to the central office by way of a digital local loop. Two twisted pairs can be used for this, though more use of fiber optics is expected in the future.

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Basic-interface users have two 64 kb/s B channels for voice or data, one 16 kb/s D channel, and 48 kb/s for network overhead. The D channel is used to set up and monitor calls and can also be employed for low-data-rate applications such as remote meter-reading. All channels are carried on one physical line, using time-division multiplexing. Two pairs are used, one for signals in each direction. Figure 5.8 shows typical connections to the ISDN. The primary interface is known as a T type interface, and the basic interface has the designation S. Terminal equipment, such as digital telephones and data terminals, designed especially for use with ISDN, is referred to as TE1 (terminal equipment type 1), and connects directly to the network at point S. The network termination equipment designated NT2 could be a PBX, a small computer network called a local area network , or a central office. Terminal equipment not especially designed for ISDN is designated TE2 (terminal equipment type 2) and would need a terminal adapter (TA) to allow it to work with the ISDN. Examples of type two equipment would be ordinary analog telephones, ordinary fax machines, and personal computers with serial ports. Each of these would need a different type of terminal adapter.
FIGURE 5.8 ISDN access

Implementation of the ISDN has been slow, leading some telecommunications people to claim, tongue-in-cheek, that the abbreviation means it still does nothing. Several reasons can be advanced for this. First, converting local loops to digital technology is expensive, and it is questionable whether the results justify the cost for most small users. Residential telephone users would not notice the difference (except that they would have to replace all their telephones or buy terminal adapters), and analog lines with low-cost modems or fax machines are quite satisfactory for occasional data users. Newer techniques like Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) , which is described in the next section, and modems using cable-television cable have higher data rates and are more attractive for residential and small-office data communication. Very large data users often need a data rate well in excess of the primary interface rate for ISDN. They are already using other types of networks. It appears possible that the ISDN standard is becoming obsolete before it can be fully implemented.

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With this in mind, work has already begun on a revised and improved version of ISDN called broadband ISDN ( B-ISDN ). The idea is to use much larger bandwidths and higher data rates, so that high-speed data and video can be transmitted. B-ISDN uses data rates of 100 to 600 Mb/s.

Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL)

The idea behind the asymmetrical digital subscriber line (ADSL) is to use the frequencies above the voice range for high-speed data while leaving the use of the local loop for analog telephony intact. This allows the subscriber to use conventional analog telephones without special adapters, while simultaneously sending and receiving high-speed data. The word asymmetrical in the name refers to the fact that the system is designed for faster communication from the network to the subscriber than from the subscriber to the network. Typical uses for ADSL include internet access and interactive television; for both of these the subscriber needs to receive data at a faster rate than it needs to be transmitted. There are many types of ADSL using different-frequency carriers for downstream (to the subscriber) and upstream (from the subscriber) data. Downstream data rates vary from about 1 to 8 Mb/s, with upstream rates from 160 to 640 kb/s. Most systems use FDM to separate upstream from downstream data, as illustrated in Figure 5.9. Note that the downstream signal has wider bandwidth, as would be expected considering its higher data rate. Most ADSL systems require the installation of a splitter at the customer premises to separate voice and data signals, but one variety, known as DSL Lite, requires no splitter and provides a downstream rate of up to 1.5 Mb/s. ADSL has the advantage over ISDN in that data signals do not have to go through the central office switch. This means that a user can be connected to the internet on a continuous rather than a dial-up basis. It also reduces traffic on the switched network.
FIGURE 5.9 Spectrum of a typical ADSL system

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'

Summary

The main points to remember from this chapter are:


(

The public switched telephone network is of great importance for wireless communication because it links wireless users with other usersboth wireless and wired. Many of the specifications for telephone equipment have their basis in nineteenth century technology and have remained almost unchanged for reasons of compatibility. Common-channel signaling allows the telephone network to set up calls economically, without tying up voice lines, and allows the system to provide a considerable amount of data about calls. Wireless systems that connect with the telephone system can use its common-channel signaling system to carry information about subscribers roaming out of their local service areas. Modern telephone systems are digital except for the subscriber loop, and progress is being made towards digitizing the local loop as well. Digital telephone signals are time-division multiplexed with a data rate of 64 kb/s per voice channel. Signaling can be done by robbing bits from the voice signal but common-channel signaling using Signaling System Seven is more efficient and allows more information to be shared. ISDN allows the telephone system to be completely digital from end to end. ADSL allows for a conventional analog voice local loop and a high-speed data link to be combined on one twisted pair.

( Key Terms
Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) method of providing high-speed data transmission on twisted-pair telephone loops by using high-frequency carriers B (bearer) channels communication in ISDN, channels that carry subscriber

bit robbing use of bits that normally carry payload information for other purposes, such as controlling the communication system bit stuffing addition of bits to a bitstream to compensate for timing variations call blocking failure to connect a telephone call because of lack of system capacity

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central office switch in a telephone system that connects to local subscriber lines circuit-switched network communication system in which a dedicated channel is set up between parties for the duration of the communication common-channel signaling use of a separate signaling channel in a telephone system, so that voice channels do not have to carry signaling information crosstalk interference between two signals multiplexed into the same channel D (data) channel in ISDN, a communication channel used for setting up calls and not for user communication dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) dialing signaling using combinations of two audio tones transmitted on the voice channel end office see central office fiber-in-the-loop (FITL) use of optical fiber for telephone connections to individual customers hybrid coil a specialized transformer (or its electronic equivalent) that allows telephone voice signals to travel in both directions simultaneously on a single twisted-pair loop in-band signals control signals sent in a voice channel at voice frequencies control signals using the same channel as a voice signal in-channel signals

integrated services digital network (ISDN) telephone system using digital local loops for both voice and data, with the codec in the telephone equipment justification addition of bits to a digital signal to compensate for differences in clock rates; informally known as bit stuffing local access and transport area (LATA) in a telephone system, the area controlled by one central office switch local area network a small data network, usually confined to a building or cluster of buildings local loop in a telephone system, the wiring from the central office to an individual customer out-of-band in telephone signaling, a control signal that is outside the voice frequency range packet-switched network a communication system that works using data divided into relatively short transmissions called packets; these are

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routed through the system without requiring a long-term connection between sender and receiver point of presence (POP) another place where one telephone network connects to small telephone switch located on the ordinary public wireline

private branch exchange (PBX) customer premises

public switched telephone system (PSTN) phone system

ringback signal in telephony, a signal generated at the central office and sent to the originating telephone to indicate that the destination telephone is ringing sidetone in telephony, the presence in the receiver of sounds picked up by the transmitter of the same telephone signaling system seven (SS7) system used in telephony which transmits all call setup information on a packet-data network that is separate from the voice channels used for telephone conversations tandem office telephone switch that connects only to other switches, and not to individual customers trunk lines transmission line carrying many signals, either on multiple pairs or multiplexed together on a single twisted-pair, coaxial cable, or optical fiber

( Questions
1. Explain briefly how the telephone network differs from a broadcasting network. 2. Explain the difference between circuit-switched and packet-switched networks. Is the PSTN mainly circuit-switched or packet-switched? 3. What is a central office? 4. What is the difference between a tandem office and an end office? 5. What is a trunk line? 6. What is meant by a LATA? 7. How do wireless telephone providers connect to the wired telephone network? 8. How has the breakup of the Bell monopoly changed the North American telephone network? 9. What is meant by call blocking, and why does it happen?

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10. How many wires are needed (for a single line) from the individual telephone set to the central office? 11. How many wires are normally contained in the cable from an individual residence subscriber to the network? Why is this number different from the answer to Question 10 above? 12. Explain the meaning of the terms tip and ring. Which has negative polarity? 13. Explain how pulse dialing works. 14. What is meant by DTMF dialing, and why is it better than pulse dialing? 15. What is the function of the hybrid coil in a telephone instrument? 16. What is sidetone and why is it used in a telephone instrument? 17. Approximately how much bandwidth, at baseband, is needed for one channel of telephone-quality audio? 18. List the steps required in originating a local call. Include the appropriate voltages and frequencies that appear at the telephone instrument. 19. Describe the difference between in-band and out-of-band signaling, and give an example of each. 20. Describe the difference between in-channel and common-channel signaling. Which is the more modern system? 21. How does common-channel signaling reduce the vulnerability of the telephone system to fraudulent use? 22. Name some types of information that are carried by Signaling System Seven. 23. What type of data channel is used by SS7? 24. What type of modulation is used in FDM telephony? 25. What type of modulation is used in TDM telephony? 26. What is meant by bit robbing? What is its function and why is it undesirable for data connections? 27. What is meant by bit stuffing? When and why is it necessary? 28. Compare basic-rate ISDN and ADSL as technologies for voice telephony. Compare number of lines and type of equipment needed. 29. Compare basic-rate ISDN and ADSL as technologies for data communication. Compare data rates and connection type.

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( Problems
1. Suppose the voltage across a telephone line, at the subscriber, drops from 48 V to 10 V when the phone goes off hook. If the telephone instrument has a resistance of 200 ohms when off hook and represents an open circuit when on hook, calculate: (a) the current that flows when the phone is off hook (b) the combined resistance of the local loop and the power source at the central office 2. The local loop has a resistance of 650 ohms and the telephone instrument has a ringer voltage of 80 volts when the voltage at the central office is 100 V. Calculate the impedance of the ringer in the telephone. 3. Find the DTMF frequencies for the number 8. 4. What number is represented by tones of 770 and 1209 Hz, in the DTMF system? 5. Calculate the overhead of a DS-4 signal: (a) in bits per second (b) as a percentage of the total bit rate 6. By what percentage does the use of bit robbing reduce the data capacity of a DS-1 signal? 7. What is the proportion of overhead in a basic rate ISDN signal? (Assume the D channel is part of the overhead.) Compare with the overhead in a DS-1 signal. 8. The fastest modem for use on an analog telephone line operates at 56 kb/s in both directions. If an ADSL system has an upstream rate of 640 kb/s and a downstream rate of 1.5 Mb/s, by what factor does it exceed the modem data rate in each direction? 9. Compare the data rate available with basic-rate ISDN and that available with the ADSL system described in the previous problem. By what factor does ADSL exceed basic-rate ISDN in each direction: (a) if a voice call is being made simultaneously with data? (b) if no voice call is being made so that the whole available ISDN rate can be used for data? 10. Telephone signals can be carried by radio using either analog or digital modulation schemes. Compare the bandwidth required to carry each of the following signals: (a) an analog voice signal with a baseband bandwidth of 4 kHz using SSBSC AM (often used for terrestrial microwave links where many voice signals are transmitted together)

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(b) the same analog voice signal using FM with a frequency deviation of 12 kHz (used for cellular phones) (c) a standard digital voice signal using QPSK and assuming a channel with a signal-to-noise ratio of 20 dB. (Your answer to this question may suggest why data compression and vocoders are often used when digital signals are to be transmitted by radio.)

Radio Propagation

Objectives
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
( (

Describe the propagation of radio waves in free space and over land. Calculate power density and electric and magnetic field intensity for waves propagating in free space. Calculate free-space attenuation and path loss. Perform the necessary calculations to determine the maximum communication range for line-of-sight propagation. Calculate path loss in a mobile environment, and explain how such an environment differs from free space. Explain rapid fading and calculate the fade period for a moving vehicle. Describe the use of repeaters to increase communication range. Explain the cellular concept and calculate the signal-to-interference ratio for cellular systems. Describe how cell-splitting can increase the capacity of a system. Describe means to reduce the effects of fading in mobile systems. Distinguish between geostationary satellites and those in lower orbits, and explain the advantages and disadvantages of each.

( (

( ( (

( ( (

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7.1

Introduction
In the previous chapter we studied the propagation of electromagnetic waves on transmission lines and in waveguides. That is, we looked at the wired part of wireless communication. In this chapter we consider the wireless part. Waves propagate through space as transverse electromagnetic (TEM) waves. This means that the electric field, the magnetic field, and the direction of travel of the wave are all mutually perpendicular. The sketch in Figure 7.1 is an attempt to represent this three-dimensional process in two dimensions. The polarization of a wave is the direction of the electric field vector. Polarization may be horizontal or vertical and can also be circular or elliptical if the electric field vector rotates as it moves through space. Radio waves are generated by electrons moving in a conductor, or set of conductors, called an antenna. Antennas are the subject of the next chapter. Once launched, electromagnetic waves can travel through free space and through many materials. Any good dielectric will pass radio waves; the material does not have to be transparent to light. The waves do not travel well through lossy conductors, such as seawater, because the electric fields cause currents to flow that dissipate the energy of the wave very quickly. Radio waves reflect from good conductors, such as copper or aluminum. The speed of propagation of radio waves in free space is the same as that of light, approximately 300 106 m/s. In other media, the velocity is lower.
FIGURE 7.1 Transverse electromagnetic waves

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The propagation velocity is given by vp = where v p = propagation velocity in the medium c = 300 10 6 m/s, the propagation velocity in free space r = the relative permittivity (dielectric constant) of the medium This is the same equation given in Chapter 6 for the velocity of signals along a coaxial cable. One way of thinking of such a line is to imagine an electromagnetic wave propagating through the dielectric, guided by the conductors. It should be no surprise that the wave equation in Chapter 6 also applies to waves in free space and dielectrics. Radio waves are refracted as they pass from one medium to another with a different propagation velocity, just as light is. c r (7.1)

'

7.2

Free-Space Propagation
The simplest source of electromagnetic waves would be a point in space. Waves would radiate equally from this source in all directions. A wavefront, that is, a surface on which all the waves have the same phase, would be the surface of a sphere. Such a source is called an isotropic radiator and is shown in Figure 7.2. Of course, an actual point source is not possible, but the approximation is good at distances that are large compared with the dimensions of the source. This is nearly always true of radio propagation. If only a small area on the sphere shown in Figure 7.2 is examined and if the distance from the center of the sphere is large, the area in question
FIGURE 7.2 Isotropic radiator

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resembles a plane. In the same way, we experience the earth as flat, though we know it is roughly spherical. Consequently, waves propagating in free space are usually assumed to be plane waves, which are often simpler to deal with than spherical waves. There is no loss of energy as radio waves propagate in free space, but there is attenuation due to the spreading of the waves. If a sphere were drawn at any distance from the source and concentric with it, all the energy from the source would pass through the surface of the sphere. Since no energy would be absorbed by free space, this would be true for any distance, no matter how large. The energy would be spread over a larger surface as the distance from the source increased. Since an isotropic radiator radiates equally in all directions, the power density, in watts per square meter, is simply the total power divided by the surface area of the sphere. Put mathematically, PD = where P D = power density in W/m 2 P t = transmitted power in W r = distance from the antenna in meters Not surprisingly, this is the same square-law attenuation that applies to light and sound, and, in fact, to any form of radiation. It is important to realize that this attenuation is not due to any loss of energy in the medium, but only to the spreading out of the energy as it moves farther from the source. Any actual losses will be in addition to this. Pt 4 r2 (7.2)

EXAMPLE 7.1

Y
A power of 100 W is supplied to an isotropic radiator. What is the power density at a point 10 km away?

SOLUTION
From Equation (7.2), PD = = Pt 4 r2 100 W 4 (10 103 m)2

= 79.6 nW/m2

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Real antennas do not radiate equally in all directions, of course. Equation (7.2) can easily be modified to reflect this, if we define antenna gain as follows: Gt = where G t = transmitting antenna gain P DA = power density in a given direction from the real antenna P DI = power density at the same distance from an isotropic radiator with the same P t Antennas are passive devices and do not have actual power gain. They achieve a greater power density in certain directions at the expense of reduced radiation in other directions. In this capacity, an antenna resembles the reflector in a flashlight more than it does an amplifier. The ways in which antennas can be constructed will be examined in the next chapter. Now we can modify Equation (7.2) to include antenna gain: PD = PG t t 4 r2 (7.4) PDA PDI (7.3)

Usually, antenna gain is specified in dBi, where the i indicates gain with respect to an isotropic radiator. The gain must be converted to a power ratio to be used with Equation (7.4). We can define the effective isotropic radiated power (EIRP) of a transmitting system in a given direction as the transmitter power that would be needed, with an isotropic radiator, to produce the same power density in the given direction. Therefore, it is apparent that EIRP = P t G t and Equation (7.4) can be modified for use with EIRP. PD = EIRP 4 r2 (7.6) (7.5)

The use of Equation (7.4) or Equation (7.6) in a given problem depends on whether the transmitter power and antenna gain are specified separately or combined into one EIRP rating.

EXAMPLE 7.2

Y
The transmitter of Example 7.1 is used with an antenna having a gain of 5 dBi. Calculate the EIRP and the power density at a distance of 10 km.

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SOLUTION
First convert the gain to a power ratio. 5 Gt = log 1 10 = 316 . This means that the EIRP in the given direction is about three times the actual transmitter power. More precisely, EIRP = GtPt = 3.16 100 W = 316 W The power density is PD = = EIRP 4 r2 316 4 (10 103 )2

= 251.5 nW/m2

X
The strength of a signal is more often given in terms of its electric field intensity than power density, perhaps because the former is easier to measure. There is a simple relationship between electric field intensity and power density. Power density is analogous to power in a lumped-constant system, and electric field intensity is the equivalent of voltage. The familiar equation from basic electricity: P = V2 R

becomes PD = where E = electric field intensity in volts per meter Z = characteristic impedance of the medium in ohms The characteristic impedance of free space is 377 so, in free space, PD = E2 377 (7.7) E2 Z

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It is quite easy to find a direct relationship between EIRP, distance, and electric field strength. First we rearrange Equation (7.7) so that E is the unknown: E = 377PD (7.8)

Now we can substitute the expression for PD found in Equation (7.6) into this equation to get: E = 377 EIRP 4 r2 30 EIRP r (7.9)

EXAMPLE 7.3

Y
Find the electric field intensity for the signal of Example 7.2, at the same distance (10 km) from the source.

SOLUTION
There are two ways to do this. Since PD is already known, we could use Equation (7.8): E = = 377PD 377 2515 . 109

= 9.74 mV/m Alternatively we could begin again with Equation (7.9): E = 30 EIRP r 30 316 10 103

= 9.74 mV/m

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Receiving Antenna Gain and Effective Area

A receiving antenna absorbs some of the energy from radio waves that pass it. Since the power in the wave is proportional to the area through which it passes, a large antenna will intercept more energy than a smaller one (other things being equal) because it intercepts a larger area. Antennas are also more efficient at absorbing power from some directions than from others. For instance, a satellite dish would not be very efficient if it were pointed at the ground instead of the satellite. In other words, receiving antennas have gain, just as transmitting antennas do. In fact, the gain is the same whether the antenna is used for receiving or transmitting. The power extracted from the wave by a receiving antenna depends both on its physical size and on its gain. The effective area of an antenna can be defined as Ae = where A e = effective area of the antenna in m 2 P r = power delivered to the receiver in W P D = power density of the wave in W/m 2 Equation (7.10) simply tells us that the effective area of an antenna is the area from which all the power in the wave is extracted and delivered to the receiver. Combining Equation (7.10) with Equation (7.4) gives Pr = Ae PD = Ae PG t t 4 r2 (7.11) Pr PD (7.10)

It can be shown that the effective area of a receiving antenna is Ae where G r = antenna gain, as a power ratio = wavelength of the signal 2G r = 4 (7.12)

Path Loss

Combining Equations (7.11) and (7.12) gives an expression for the receiver power in terms of antenna gain, which is much more commonly found in specifications than is effective area.

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Pr = = =

Ae PG t t 4 r2 2G r PG t t (4 )(4 r 2 ) 2 PG t t Gr 16 2r 2

(7.13)

While accurate, this equation is not very convenient. Gain and attenuation are usually expressed in decibels rather than directly as power ratios; the distance between transmitter and receiver is more likely to be given in kilometers than meters; and the frequency of the signal, in megahertz, is more commonly used than its wavelength. It is quite easy to perform the necessary conversions to arrive at a more useful equation. The work involved is left as an exercise; the solution follows. P r = P t + G t + G r (32.44 + 20 log d + 20 log ) where P r = received power in dBm P t = transmitted power in dBm G t = transmitting antenna gain in dBi G r = receiving antenna gain in dBi d = distance between transmitter and receiver, in km = frequency in MHz Note that Pt and Pr are the power levels at the transmitting and receiving antennas, respectively. Attenuation due to transmission-line losses or mismatch is not included; these losses (in decibels) can be found separately and subtracted from the result for P r given above to give the actual received power. Sometimes it is convenient to have an expression for the free-space attenuation, often called path loss, that is independent of antenna gain. This is easily obtained by extracting the loss part of Equation (7.14), thereby converting Equation (7.14) into two equations: Pr = Pt + Gt + Gr Ls L s = 32.44 + 20 log d + 20 log where L s = free-space loss in decibels (7.15) (7.16) (7.14)

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Using Equation (7.15) allows us to construct a diagram of a radio link, showing all the power levels, gains, and losses, and then merely add and subtract to find the received power. It also allows for the use of a different expression for path loss, necessary if the medium is not free space. The following examples show the use of path loss in calculating received signal strength. First let us consider a very straightforward application. Then look at Example 7.5, which is a little more complex, involving transmission-line loss and mismatch.

EXAMPLE 7.4

Y
A transmitter has a power output of 150 W at a carrier frequency of 325 MHz. It is connected to an antenna with a gain of 12 dBi. The receiving antenna is 10 km away and has a gain of 5 dBi. Calculate the power delivered to the receiver, assuming free-space propagation. Assume also that there are no losses or mismatches in the system.

SOLUTION
In all problems of this sort, it is a good idea to begin by sketching the system. This example can be done easily enough without such a sketch, but many real-world situations are more complex. See Figure 7.3 for the setup.

FIGURE 7.3

The next step is to convert the transmitter power into dBm: Pt Pt(dBm) = 10 log 1 mW 150 W = 10 log 0.001 W = 51.8 dBm

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Marking the transmitter power and antenna gains on the sketch shows us that the only missing link is the path loss. We can find this from Equation (7.16). Ls = 32.44 + 20 log d + 20 log = 32.44 + 20 log 10 + 20 log 325 = 102.7 dB Now we can easily find the received power from Equation (7.15). Pr = Pt + Gt + Gr Ls = 51.8 + 12 + 5 102.7 = 33.9 dBm

EXAMPLE 7.5

Y
A transmitter has a power output of 10 W at a frequency of 250 MHz. It is connected by 20 m of a transmission line having a loss of 3 dB/100 m to an antenna with a gain of 6 dBi. The receiving antenna is 25 km away and has a gain of 4 dBi. There is negligible loss in the receiver feedline, but the receiver is mismatched: the antenna and line are designed for a 50 impedance, but the receiver input is 75 . Calculate the power delivered to the receiver, assuming free-space propagation.

SOLUTION
We begin with the sketch of Figure 7.4. A glance at the sketch shows what needs to be done. First, as in the previous example, we convert the transmitter power to dBm. Pt Pt(dBm) = 10 log 1 mW 10 W = 10 log 0.001 W = 40 dBm
FIGURE 7.4

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Next, it is necessary to find the loss at each stage of the system. If all the losses are in decibels, it will only be necessary to add them to get the total loss. We use Equation (7.16) to find the path loss. Ls = 32.44 + 20 log d + 20 log = 32.44 + 20 log 25 + 20 log 250 = 108.3 dB For the transmitter feedline, the loss is Ltx = 20 m 3 dB = 0.6 dB 100 m

The receiver feedline is lossless, but some of the power reflects from the receiver back into the antenna due to the mismatch. This power will be reradiated by the antenna, and will never reach the receiver. Therefore, for our purposes it is a loss. Remember from Chapter 6 that the proportion of power reflected is the square of the reflection coefficient and the reflection coefficient is given by = = ZL Z0 ZL + Z0 75 50 75 + 50

= 0.2 2 = 0.22 = 0.04 The proportion of the incident power that reaches the load is 1 2 = 0.96 In decibels, the loss due to mismatch is Ltx = 10 log 0.96 = 0.177 dB Now we can easily find the received signal strength. We start with the transmitter power in dBm, add all the gains, and subtract all the losses (in dB) to get the result. Thus we find that Pr = Pt Ltx + Gt Ls + Gr Lrx = 40 0.6 + 6 108.3 + 4 0.177 = 59.1 dBm

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7.3

Terrestrial Propagation
The simplified free-space model described above has some applicability to propagation over the surface of the earth. Air has very little loss at frequencies below about 20 GHz, and its dielectric constant is close to one. The most obvious differences between free-space and terrestrial propagation are that range is often limited by the horizon, signals may reflect from the earth itself, and various obstacles may exist between transmitter and receiver. At low-to-medium frequencies (up to about 3 MHz), radio waves can follow the curvature of the earth, a phenomenon known as ground-wave propagation, and in the high-frequency range (about 3 to 30 MHz) the waves may be returned to earth from an ionized region in the atmosphere called the ionosphere. Both ground-wave and ionospheric propagation can result in reception of signals at much greater distances than the horizon, but neither is generally applicable at the frequencies (from VHF up) generally employed in wireless communication systems. At these frequencies, propagation is generally line-of-sight, as explained in the next section.

Line-of-Sight Propagation

The practical communication distance for line-of-sight propagation is limited by the curvature of the earth. In spite of the title of this section, the maximum distance is actually greater than the eye can see because refraction in the atmosphere tends to bend radio waves slightly toward the earth. The dielectric constant of air usually decreases with increasing height, because of the reduction in pressure, temperature, and humidity with increasing distance from the earth. The effect varies with weather conditions, but it usually results in radio communication being possible over a distance approximately one-third greater than the visual line of sight. Just as one can see farther from a high place, the height above average terrain of both the transmitting and receiving antennas is very important in calculating the maximum distance for radio communication. Figure 7.5 shows the effect of increased antenna height on maximum range. Antenna heights are greatly exaggerated in the figure, of course.

FIGURE 7.5

Line-of-sight propagation

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An approximate value for the maximum distance between transmitter and receiver, over reasonably level terrain, is given by the following equation: d = where d = maximum distance in kilometers h t = height of the transmitting antenna in meters h r = height of the receiving antenna in meters 17ht + 17hr (7.17)

EXAMPLE 7.6

Y
A taxi company uses a central dispatcher, with an antenna at the top of a 15 m tower, to communicate with taxicabs. The taxi antennas are on the roofs of the cars, approximately 1.5 m above the ground. Calculate the maximum communication distance: (a) between the dispatcher and a taxi (b) between two taxis

SOLUTION
(a) d = = 17ht + 17hr 17 15 + 17 15 .

= 21 km (b) d = = 17ht + 17hr 17 15 . + 17 15 .

= 10.1 km

X
The maximum range calculated from Equation (7.17) will only be achieved if the received signal strength, as calculated in the previous section, is sufficient. Maximum range is achieved by using a combination of reasonably large transmitter power and high-gain antennas located as high as possible.

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It is not always desirable to achieve maximum distance. There are situations, as in the cellular systems to be described later, where it is common to limit the effective range to a distance smaller than predicted by Equation (7.17).

Multipath Propagation

Although line-of-sight propagation uses a direct path from transmitter to receiver, the receiver can also pick up reflected signals. Probably the simplest case is reflection from the ground, as shown in Figure 7.6. If the ground is rough, the reflected signal is scattered and its intensity is low in any given direction. If, on the other hand, the reflecting surface is relatively smooth a body of water, for instancethe reflected signal at the receiver can have a strength comparable to that of the incident wave, and the two signals will interfere. Whether the interference is constructive or destructive depends on the phase relationship between the signals: if they are in phase, the resulting signal strength is increased, but if they are 180 out of phase, there is partial cancellation. When the surface is highly reflective, the reduction in signal strength can be 20 dB or more. This effect is called fading. The exact phase relationship depends on the difference, expressed in wavelengths, between the lengths of the transmission paths for the direct and reflected signals. In addition, there is usually a phase shift of 180 at the point of reflection.

FIGURE 7.6 Ground reflections

If the transmitter and receiver locations are fixed, the effect of reflections can often be reduced by carefully surveying the proposed route and adjusting the transmitter and receiver antenna heights so that any reflection takes place in wooded areas or rough terrain, where the reflection will be diffuse and weak. Where most of the path is over a reflective surface such as desert or water, fading can be reduced by using either frequency diversity or spatial diversity. In the former method, more than one frequency is available for use; the difference, in wavelengths, between the direct and incident path lengths will be different for the two frequencies. In spatial diversity there are two receiving antennas, usually mounted one above the other on the same tower. The difference between direct and reflected path length is different for the two antennas.

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Diffraction from obstacles in the path can also be a problem for line-of-sight radio links, when the direct wave and the diffracted wave have opposite phase and tend to cancel. Figure 7.7 shows this effect of diffraction.

FIGURE 7.7

Diffraction

The solution to the problem of interference due to diffraction is to arrange for the direct and diffracted signals to be in phase. Again, this requires a careful survey of the proposed route and adjustment of the transmitting and receiving antenna heights to achieve this result. Problems can also occur when the signal reflects from large objects like cliffs or buildings, as shown in Figure 7.8. There may be not only phase cancellation but also significant time differences between the direct and reflected waves. These can cause a type of distortion called, not surprisingly, multipath distortion , in FM reception. Directional receiving antennas aimed in the direction of the direct signal can reduce the problem of reflections for fixed receivers.

FIGURE 7.8

Multipath reception

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The Mobile Environment

In the previous section, we looked at the basics of multipath propagation. In an environment where both transmitter and receiver are fixed, it is often possible, as noted above, to position the antennas in such a way as to reduce, if not eliminate, the effects of multipath interference. In the usual wireless situation, however, either the transmitter, the receiver, or both, are in constant motion, and the multipath environment is therefore in a constant state of flux. The luxury of carefully sited, directional antennas does not exist. In addition, the mobile and portable environment is often very cluttered with the potential for multiple reflections from vehicles and buildings. There may also be places where the direct signal is blocked by a tall building, for example. At such times a reflected signal may actually allow communication to take place where it would otherwise be impossible. Figure 7.9 shows some of the possibilities.

FIGURE 7.9 Multipath reception in a mobile environment

Mobile environments are often so cluttered that the square-law attenuation of free space, which is the basis for Equation (7.16), the path loss equation, no longer applies because of multipath propagation and shadowing by obstacles. In fact, the situation is so complex and so dependent on the actual environment that no one equation can cover all situations. Some approximations are used, however. To understand how the mobile environment changes path loss, let us first have another look at Equation (7.16): L s = 32.44 + 20 log d + 20 log Because this equation is set up to give loss in decibels, the square-law attenuation due to distance is represented by its logarithmic equivalent: 20 log d. In mobile environments the attenuation increases much more quickly with distance; values range from 30 log d to a more typical 40 log d. That is,

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attenuation is roughly proportional to the fourth power of distance because of reflections and obstacles. Equation (7.16) had no term for antenna height, since this is irrelevant in free space where there is no ground to measure height from. We looked at antenna height separately in Equation (7.17), as a limiting factor governing the maximum distance for line-of-sight propagation. Even for distances much shorter than the maximum, antenna height is an important determinant of signal strength in mobile systems. The greater the antenna height, the less important ground reflections become, and the more likely the transmitting and receiving antennas are to have an unobstructed path between them. Empirical observations show that doubling the height of a basestation antenna gives about a 6 dB decrease in path loss, while doubling the height of a (much lower) portable or mobile antenna reduces loss by about 3 dB. Path loss increases with frequency according to Equation (7.16), but only because the effective area of an antenna with a given gain decreases with frequency. For an ideal isotropic radiator and a receiving antenna of constant effective area, there is no dependence of free-space attenuation on frequency. In fact, as we pointed out earlier, the basic square-law attenuation is valid for waves as different as sound and light. The situation is different in a mobile environment because the amount of reflection and diffraction of a wave from an object is a function of the objects dimensions, in wavelengths. At the low-frequency end of the VHF range, only very large objects such as the ground and buildings cause reflections. As the frequency increases, the wavelength becomes smaller and relatively small objects begin to reflect the waves. The increase in multipath interference due to this condition may be compensated for in portable operation because signals at UHF and up have wavelengths small enough to allow them to propagate through windows, improving the results in such situations as the use of a portable wireless phone in a car or building. There is always a considerable loss in signals as they penetrate buildings. The loss varies with frequency, building construction, size and location of windows, and so on, but a rough estimate would be 20 dB at 800 MHz (cell phone range) in a typical steel-reinforced concrete office building, reduced to about 6 dB if the user is near a window facing the base station. From the foregoing, it should be obvious that the modeling of terrestrial propagation is very difficult, especially in a mobile/portable environment. There are many models; most of them combine theory with observations of actual propagation in different areas such as open flat terrain, hilly terrain, suburbs, and cities. Usually a computer is used to calculate signal strengths in the coverage region. Even so, the models are all quite approximate; they must be used with care and verified by actual field-strength measurements. Errors of 10 dB or so are common.

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As an example, we shall look at a simplified version of a model, proposed by Hata, for propagation in a dense urban mobile environment in the frequency range between 150 and 1000 MHz. A mobile antenna height of 2 m is assumed in this simplified version. L p = 68.75 + 26.16 log 13.82 log h + (44.9 6.55 log h ) log d where L p = path loss in dB = frequency in MHz h = base station antenna height in m d = distance in km Several of the factors we have already mentioned can be seen in this equation. First, note that loss increases with frequency at a greater rate than in the free-space equation. Next, notice that increased antenna height reduces loss. Finally, the loss increases much more quickly with distance than in the free-space model. Antenna height affects this loss factor as well. (7.18)

EXAMPLE 7.7

Y
Find the propagation loss for a signal at 800 MHz, with a transmitting antenna height of 30 m, over a distance of 10 km, using: (a) the free-space model (Equation 7.16) (b) the mobile-propagation model (Equation 7.18)

SOLUTION
(a) From Equation (7.16), Ls = 32.44 + 20 log d + 20 log = 32.44 + 20 log 10 + 20 log 800 = 110.5 dB (b) From Equation (7.18), Lp = 68.75 + 26.16 log 13.82 log h + (44.9 6.55 log h) log d = 68.75 + 26.16 log 800 13.82 log 30 + (44.9 6.55 log 30) log 10 = 159.5 dB There is almost 50 dB more attenuation in the mobile environment than in free space.

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Another mobile-specific problem is fast fading. As the mobile user travels through the environment, the signal strength tends to increase and decrease as the mobile moves between areas of constructive and destructive interference. As an example, suppose a mobile receiver moves directly away from the transmitting antenna and toward a reflecting surface, as shown in Figure 7.10. If the two signals are in phase at a given point, they will add. As the mobile moves forward a distance of /4, the direct path is increased and the reflected path is reduced by the same amount, resulting in a total phase shift of 180 and cancellation of the signal. The cancellation will likely not be complete, but it can be quite severe (up to 50 dB in extreme cases). When the vehicle moves another distance of /4, the signals are once again in phase. Thus the fades occur each time the car moves a distance of /2. Given the frequency of the signal and the speed of the vehicle, it is easy to estimate the time between fades. The time between fades is T = = = /2 v 2v c 2 v (7.19)

FIGURE 7.10

Fast fading in a mobile environment

EXAMPLE 7.8

Y
An automobile travels at 60 km/hr. Find the time between fades if the car uses: (a) a cell phone at 800 MHz (b) a PCS phone at 1900 MHz

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SOLUTION
First convert the cars speed to m/s. 60 km 60 103 m = hr 3.6 103 s = 16.7 m/s Now we can find the fading period using Equation (7.19). (a) T = c 2 v 300 106 2 800 106 167 .

= 11.2 ms (b) T = c 2 v 300 106 2 1900 106 167 .

= 4.7 ms Notice that the rapidity of the fading increases with both the frequency of the transmissions and the speed of the vehicle.

X
Repeaters and Cellular Systems
The previous two sections have shown that antenna height is important for line-of-sight communication. If it is desired to achieve maximum communication range, increasing antenna height increases the distance to the radio horizon. Even if the distances involved are small, increased antenna height reduces multipath interference and avoids radio shadows. Unfortunately, in a typical wireless communication system, the users are mobile or portable, and there is not much that can be done about their antenna height. Communication directly between mobile or portable users therefore has limited range and is subject to a great deal of multipath and shadowing, even at close range. A good example of such a system is citizens band (CB) radio. Even with transmitter power of about 4 W, communication tends to be poor in urban areas. Modern wireless systems use base stations with elevated antennas. The use of base stations is necessary to provide a connection with the telephone

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network, and the elevated antennas improve propagation. In addition, it is possible when required, to use higher transmitter power at the base than at the mobile or portable unit. Portable units especially should use as little power as possible to reduce the size and weight of the unit, and especially its batteries. The simplest form of base station has a transmitter and receiver on the same frequency. The mobiles use the same frequency as well. Typically all units have moderately high transmitter power (on the order of 30 W). The base-station antenna is located as high as practical in order to obtain wide coverage. Figure 7.11 shows the setup, which is commonly used for services such as taxicab dispatching. Most communication is between mobiles and the base, though mobiles can communicate directly with each other if they are close enough together. Communication is half-duplex; that is, each station can both talk and listen, but not at the same time.

FIGURE 7.11 Dispatcher system

If mobile units need to talk to each other through the base station to achieve greater range, or if they need full-duplex access to the telephone system through the base, at least two frequencies must be used. The base station in this system is called a repeater, and must transmit and receive simultaneously on at least two frequencies. Normally the same antenna is used for both transmitting and receiving, and a high-Q filter called a duplexer, using resonant cavities, is used to separate the transmit and receive frequencies. Mobiles can communicate with each other through the repeater, and if the repeater is connected to the PSTN, phone calls can be made through the repeater. There is an extensive network of amateur radio repeaters operating on this principle. The frequencies shown in Figure 7.12 are typical of one of these systems. Early mobile-phone systems used this method, and it is still in common use for fixed microwave links.

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FIGURE 7.12 Typical repeater system

The major problem with the dispatcher and repeater systems just described is, since they are constructed for maximum coverage using antennas at large elevations and high-power transmitters, they use spectrum inefficiently. One telephone conversation ties up two channels over the complete coverage area of the system, out to the radio horizon. The simplicity of being able to cover an entire city with one repeater is paid for by this great waste of spectrum. Modern cellular systems do not use the radio horizon as the limit of coverage. Antennas may still be mounted quite high in order to reduce multipath and shadowing, but the range is deliberately limited by using as low a transmitter power as possible. This enables the same frequencies to be reused at distances much closer than the radio horizon. Cellular systems are complex but much more efficient in their use of spectrum. Figure 7.13 shows a typical cellular system. (The term cellular, here, also applies to PCS systems, wireless LANs, and so on, because they all use the same general principle.) Each repeater is responsible for coverage in a small cell. As shown, the cells are hexagons with the repeater in the center, but of course in a real situation the antenna patterns will not achieve this precision and the cells will have irregular shapes with some overlap. Since each transmitter operates at low power, it is possible to reuse frequencies over a relatively short distance. Typically a repeating pattern of either twelve or seven cells is used, and the available bandwidth is divided among these cells. The frequencies can then be reused in the next pattern. To find out how many cells are needed in a pattern, it is necessary to make some assumptions. First, we assume that all signals are well above the noise level, so that cochannel interferenceinterference from transmitters

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FIGURE 7.13 Cellular system

on the same frequency in other cellsis the range-limiting factor. Next, we assume that only the nearest cells with the same frequency will cause serious problems. This is usually true. Further, assume that all transmitters have equal power. This is actually a worst-case assumption, because most cellular systems reduce transmitter power when possible to reduce interference. We need a criterion for an acceptable level of interference. Zero interference is not an option, since the next cell with the same frequency is generally above the horizon, and its signal strength may be well above the noise level. The usual assumption is that a signal-to-interference ( S / I ) ratio of at least 18 dB is sufficient. This number is based on subjective tests of communication quality with FM voice transmission, and may vary with other systems. We should also know how rapidly signals drop off with distance. The greater the attenuation, within reason, the better in a cellular system because the interfering signal, coming from a greater distance, will be affected more than the desired signal. Earlier in this chapter we saw that square-law attenuation is the rule in free space, but in mobile propagation, especially in urban areas, the attenuation is more likely to be proportional to the fourth power of the distance. Let us make that assumption for now, recognizing that the attenuation may sometimes be less than this, leading to more interference. With this information and a knowledge of geometry, we can analyze any repeating pattern of cells to find the probable S/I ratio. In particular, let us look at a pattern of seven cells, as shown in Figure 7.14, since it is the one most often used in practice. In a seven-cell pattern, there will be six interfering signals with equal distances from our chosen cell. The interference powers from these six cells will add. All other interfering signals will be much farther away and can be

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FIGURE 7.14 7-Cell repeating pattern

ignored. Let us place ourselves in the center of a cell, at the cell site, and assume that a mobile at the edge of our cell, a distance r from the center, is being interfered with by transmitters in the six nearest cells with the same number. Since the interfering signals can be anywhere in these cells, we will assume that they are all at the center of their respective cells, at a distance d from us. From geometry, the ratio between these distances, which is usually called q, is q = d = 4.6 r

Now we can find the signal-to-interference ratio, S/I. Assuming equal transmitter powers, and fourth-law attenuation S d4 = 4 I 6r = = q4 6 4.64 6

= 74.6 = 18.7 dB The result appears satisfactory at first, but it is actually marginal. Fading of the desired signal or less attenuation for any of the interfering signals could easily degrade the signal to the point where it is unusable. The situation can be improved by reusing the frequencies less often, for instance,

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using a twelve-cell repeating pattern. For such a pattern, q = 6.0, there are eleven significant interfering signals, and the theoretical performance is S d4 = I 11r 4 = = q4 11 6.04 11

= 117.8 = 20.7 dB This represents about a 2 dB improvement, but at the expense of much less frequency reuse. Another possibility, widely employed in practice, is to use sectorization . Three directional antennas are located at each base station in such a way that each antenna covers an angle of 120 degrees. Each sector uses a different set of channels. The effect of this is to reduce the number of interfering signals that must be considered from six to two. The effect on the S/I ratio is quite dramatic: S d4 = I 2r 4 q4 = 2 = 4.64 2

= 223.8 = 23.5 dB Another way of seeing this is to note that S/I improves by 6 10 log 2 = 10 log 3 = 4.8 dB The division of cells into sectors has a downside. Since each cell now has three sectors with different channels, each cell acts like three cells with only one-third the number of channels. This gives the equivalent in frequency

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reuse of a 21-cell repeating pattern; so it is actually less efficient in terms of frequency reuse than the 12-cell pattern just described. Since cell sites are expensive, however, the 7-cell pattern is more economical to build. As the number of users increases, cell sizes can be made smaller by installing more cell sites, and the frequencies can be reused over closer intervals. This technique is called cell-splitting, and gives cellular systems great flexibility to adapt to changes in demand over both space and time. Here is how cell-splitting works. The number of cells required for a given area is given by: N = where N = number of cells A = total area to be covered a = area of one cell This assumes that all cells are of equal size and that there is no overlap between cells, but it serves as a reasonably good estimate. If hexagonal cells are used, there need be no overlap, at least in theory. (In practice, the cells will not be perfectly hexagonal.) The area of a regular hexagon (one with all six sides equal) is given by the equation A = 3.464 r 2 where A = the area of the hexagon r = the radius of a circle inscribed in the hexagon, as in Figure 7.15
FIGURE 7.15 Area of hexagon

A a

(7.20)

(7.21)

The required number of cells is: N = = A a A 3.464 r 2 (7.22)

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The number of cells required is inversely proportional to the square of the cell radius. Reducing the cell radius by a factor of two increases the number of cells and therefore the system capacity by a factor of four. Unfortunately, reducing the cell radius by a factor of two also increases the number of cell sites required by a factor of four. As cell sizes are reduced, the available spectrum is used more efficiently, but cell-site equipment is not, since the maximum number of users per cell remains constant.

EXAMPLE 7.9

Y
A metropolitan area of 1000 square km is to be covered by cells with a radius of 2 km. How many cell sites would be required, assuming hexagonal cells?

SOLUTION
From Equation (7.22), N = A 3.464 r 2 1000 3.464 2 2

= 73

X
Users of earlier mobile-radio systems could use the same frequencies throughout a conversation, but since the cells in a cellular radio system are relatively small, many calls from or to moving vehicles must be transferred or handed off from one cell site to another as the vehicles proceed. This requires a change in frequency, since frequencies are not reused in adjacent cells. The system has to instruct the mobile units to change frequency. The details will be covered later, but it is worth noting here that cellular schemes were not practical for portable/mobile use until microprocessors were cheap and small enough to be incorporated in the phones themselves.

Control of Fading in Mobile Systems

Though mobile and portable communication is more problematic than for fixed locations, there are many techniques that can be used to reduce the problem of fading. Probably the most obvious is to increase the transmitter power. If the signal is subject to 20-dB fades, then increasing power by 20 dB should solve the problem. The trouble with this is that a 20-dB increase requires multiplying transmitter power by 100. This may be practical for base stations, but size and battery-life considerations make it a highly undesirable solution for

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mobile and especially portable equipment. A typical portable cell phone produces about 700 mW of RF power. Increasing this to 70 W would be completely impractical: the equipment would have to be mounted in a vehicle. Increasing power can also cause interference problems. Frequency diversity of the conventional type, where two channels are used in place of one in each direction, is similarly impractical. Mobile systems seldom have enough bandwidth to afford this luxury. There is an exception, however: spread spectrum systems achieve frequency diversity without an increase in bandwidth. They do this by, in effect, sharing multiple RF channels among multiple voice channels so that each voice channel has its data bits distributed over many frequencies. Fading of a narrow band of frequencies causes some loss of data, but this can often be corrected by error-correcting codes. CDMA spread-spectrum systems have another advantage in the presence of multipath interference. Using a special receiver called a rake receiver, they can receive several data streams at once. These actually contain the same data, displaced in time because of the different propagation times that arise from the reflections. The receiver combines the power from the various streams. This adds another possible type of diversity to the system. Space diversity can be used with portable and mobile systems. Usually this consists of positioning two receiving antennas at the base station (two per sector in a sectorized system), though it is possible to use space diversity on a vehicle by installing an antenna at each end. Since multipath interference is very dependent on the exact phase difference between signals traveling along different paths, moving the antenna, which changes the path length for both direct and reflected signals, can often cause the interference to become constructive rather than destructive. As a vehicle or pedestrian moves, all the path lengths are constantly changing, causing the signal strength to vary rhythmically as the interference cycles between constructive and destructive. The frequency of these fades depends on the signal wavelength and the vehicles speed. Spreading a digital signal in time by transmitting it more than once or by scrambling bits so that consecutive bits in the baseband signal are not transmitted in the same order, can help to reduce the destructive effects of multipath fading in a mobile environment.

'

7.4

Satellite Propagation
Satellites have been used for many years as repeaters for broadcast and point-to-point transmission, but their use in wireless communication is relatively new. Several wireless satellite systems are now in operation, however.

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In this chapter we look at the basics of propagation to and from satellites. The details of practical systems will be covered in Chapter 12. Many communication satellites use the geosynchronous orbit: that is, they occupy a circular orbit above the equator, at a distance of 35,784 km above the earths surface. At this height, the satellites orbital period is equal to the time taken by the earth to rotate once, approximately 24 hours. If the direction of the satellites motion is the same as that of the earths rotation, the satellite appears to remain almost stationary above one spot on the earths surface. The satellite can then be said to be geostationary, as illustrated in Figure 7.16. Geostationary satellites are convenient in several respects. Antennas at fixed earth stations can be aimed once and left in place. Satellites are usable at all times; they never disappear below the horizon. Geostationary satellites have many disadvantages for mobile use, however. Their distance from earth is so great that high-gain antennas, which are impossible to use in handheld phones, are highly desirable. The transmitter power required puts a strain on batteries. The path length also causes a time delay of about 0.25 seconds for a round trip, which is inconvenient. Some mobile communication systems do employ geostationary satellites, but most of the new proposals use constellations of satellites at much lower altitudes where signals are stronger and propagation time is shorter. Satellites that are not geostationary are called orbital satellites, though of course all satellites are in orbit. They are further categorized by the height of their orbit above the earth. Low earth orbit (LEO) satellites have orbits below about 1500 km while medium earth orbit (MEO) systems are from
FIGURE 7.16 Geostationary satellite orbit

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